16,189 research outputs found
Meservey-Tedrow-Fulde effect in a quantum dot embedded between metallic and superconducting electrodes
Magnetic field applied to the quantum dot coupled between one metallic and
one superconducting electrode can produce a similar effect as has been
experimentally observed by Meservey, Tedrow and Fulde [Phys. Rev. Lett. 25,
1270 (1970)] for the planar normal metal -- superconductor junctions. We
investigate the tunneling current and show that indeed the square root
singularities of differential conductance exhibit the Zeeman splitting near the
gap edge features V = +/- Delta/e. Since magnetic field affects also the in-gap
states of quantum dot it furthermore imposes a hyperfine structure on the
anomalous (subgap) Andreev current which has a crucial importance for a
signature of the Kondo resonance.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figure
Lattice study on two-color QCD with six flavors of dynamical quarks
We study the dynamics of SU(2) gauge theory with NF=6 Dirac fermions by means
of lattice simulation to investigate if they are appropriate to realization of
electroweak symmetry breaking. The discrete analogue of beta function for the
running coupling constant defined under the Schroedinger functional boundary
condition are computed on the lattices up to linear size of L/a=24 and preclude
the existence of infrared fixed point below 7.6. Gluonic observables such as
heavy quark potential, string tension, Polyakov loop suggest that the target
system is in the confining phase even in the massless quark limit.Comment: 7 pages, 9 figures, Proceedings of The 30th International Symposium
on Lattice Field Theory, June 24-29, 2012, Cairns, Australi
Tunable Fermi-Edge Resonance in an Open Quantum Dot
Resonant tunneling in an open mesoscopic quantum dot is proposed as a vehicle
to realize a tunable Fermi-edge resonance with variable coupling strength. We
solve the x-ray edge problem for a generic nonseparable scatterer and apply it
to describe tunneling in a quantum dot. The tunneling current power law
exponent is linked to the S-matrix of the dot. The control of scattering by
varying the dot shape and coupling to the leads allows to explore a wide range
of exponents. Transport properties, such as weak localization, mesoscopic
conductance fluctuations, and sensitivity to Wigner-Dyson ensemble type, have
their replicas in the Fermi-edge singularity.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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