153 research outputs found
Topological quantization and degeneracy in Josephson-junction arrays
We consider the conductivity quantization in two-dimensional arrays of
mesoscopic Josephson junctions, and examine the associated degeneracy in
various regimes of the system. The filling factor of the system may be
controlled by the gate voltage as well as the magnetic field, and its
appropriate values for quantization is obtained by employing the Jain hierarchy
scheme both in the charge description and in the vortex description. The
duality between the two descriptions then suggests the possibility that the
system undergoes a change in degeneracy while the quantized conductivity
remains fixed.Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev.
Metal-insulator transition in disordered 2DEG including temperature effects
We calculate self-consistently the mutual dependence of electron correlations
and electron-defect scattering for a two dimensional electron gas at finite
temperature. We employ an STLS approach to calculate the electron correlations
while the electron scattering rate off Coulombic impurities and surface
roughness is calculated using self-consistent current-relaxation theory. The
methods are combined and self-consistently solved. We discuss a metal-insulator
transition for a range of disorder levels and electron densities. Our results
are in good agreement with recent experimental observations.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX + epsf, 5 figure
Lattice effects on the current-voltage characteristics of superconducting arrays
The lattice effects on the current-voltage characteristics of two-dimensional
arrays of resistively shunted Josephson junctions are investigated. The lattice
potential energies due to the discrete lattice structure are calculated for
several geometries and directions of current injection. We compare the energy
barrier for vortex-pair unbinding with the lattice pinning potential, which
shows that lattice effects are negligible in the low-current limit as well as
in the high-current limit. At intermediate currents, on the other hand, the
lattice potential becomes comparable to the barrier height and the lattice
effects may be observed in the current-voltage characteristics.Comment: 5 pages including 5 figures in two columns, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Compressibility of a two-dimensional hole gas in tilted magnetic field
We have measured compressibility of a two-dimensional hole gas in
p-GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure, grown on a (100) surface, in the presence of a
tilted magnetic field. It turns out that the parallel component of magnetic
field affects neither the spin splitting nor the density of states. We conclude
that: (a) g-factor in the parallel magnetic field is nearly zero in this
system; and (b) the level of the disorder potential is not sensitive to the
parallel component of the magnetic field
Genome sequence of Jatropha curcas L., a non-edible biodiesel plant, provides a resource to improve seed-related traits
Jatropha curcas (physic nut), a nonâedible oilseed crop, represents one of the most promising alternative energy sources due to its high seed oil content, rapid growth and adaptability to various environments. We report ~339 Mbp draft whole genome sequence of J. curcas var. Chai Nat using both the PacBio and Illumina sequencing platforms. We identified and categorized differentially expressed genes related to biosynthesis of lipid and toxic compound among four stages of seed development. Triacylglycerol (TAG), the major component of seed storage oil, is mainly synthesized by phospholipid:diacylglycerol acyltransferase in Jatropha, and continuous high expression of homologs of oleosin over seed development contributes to accumulation of high level of oil in kernels by preventing the breakdown of TAG. A physical cluster of genes for diterpenoid biosynthetic enzymes, including casbene synthases highly responsible for a toxic compound, phorbol ester, in seed cake, was syntenically highly conserved between Jatropha and castor bean. Transcriptomic analysis of female and male flowers revealed the upâregulation of a dozen family of TFs in female flower. Additionally, we constructed a robust species tree enabling estimation of divergence times among nine Jatropha species and five commercial crops in Malpighiales order. Our results will help researchers and breeders increase energy efficiency of this important oil seed crop by improving yield and oil content, and eliminating toxic compound in seed cake for animal feed
The relative importance of electron-electron interactions compared to disorder in the two-dimensional "metallic" state
The effect of substrate bias and surface gate voltage on the low temperature
resistivity of a Si-MOSFET is studied for electron concentrations where the
resistivity increases with increasing temperature. This technique offers two
degrees of freedom for controlling the electron concentration and the device
mobility, thereby providing a means to evaluate the relative importance of
electron-electron interactions and disorder in this so-called ``metallic''
regime. For temperatures well below the Fermi temperature, the data obey a
scaling law where the disorder parameter (), and not the
concentration, appears explicitly. This suggests that interactions, although
present, do not alter the Fermi-liquid properties of the system fundamentally.
Furthermore, this experimental observation is reproduced in results of
calculations based on temperature-dependent screening, in the context of
Drude-Boltzmann theory.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Two-Dimensional Wigner Crystal in Anisotropic Semiconductor
We investigate the effect of mass anisotropy on the Wigner crystallization
transition in a two-dimensional (2D) electron gas. The static and dynamical
properties of a 2D Wigner crystal have been calculated for arbitrary 2D Bravais
lattices in the presence of anisotropic mass, as may be obtainable in Si
MOSFETs with (110) surface. By studying the stability of all possible lattices,
we find significant change in the crystal structure and melting density of the
electron lattice with the lowest ground state energy.Comment: 4 pages, revtex, 4 figure
Synchronization and resonance in a driven system of coupled oscillators
We study the noise effects in a driven system of globally coupled
oscillators, with particular attention to the interplay between driving and
noise. The self-consistency equation for the order parameter, which measures
the collective synchronization of the system, is derived; it is found that the
total order parameter decreases monotonically with noise, indicating overall
suppression of synchronization. Still, for large coupling strengths, there
exists an optimal noise level at which the periodic (ac) component of the order
parameter reaches its maximum. The response of the phase velocity is also
examined and found to display resonance behavior.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figure
The Parallel Magnetoconductance of Interacting Electrons in a Two Dimensional Disordered System
The transport properties of interacting electrons for which the spin degree
of freedom is taken into account are numerically studied for small two
dimensional diffusive clusters. On-site electron-electron interactions tend to
delocalize the electrons, while long-range interactions enhance localization.
On careful examination of the transport properties, we reach the conclusion
that it does not show a two dimensional metal insulator transition driven by
interactions. A parallel magnetic field leads to enhanced resistivity, which
saturates once the electrons become fully spin polarized. The strength of the
magnetic field for which the resistivity saturates decreases as electron
density goes down. Thus, the numerical calculations capture some of the
features seen in recent experimental measurements of parallel
magnetoconductance.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Metallicity and its low temperature behavior in dilute 2D carrier systems
We theoretically consider the temperature and density dependent transport
properties of semiconductor-based 2D carrier systems within the RPA-Boltzmann
transport theory, taking into account realistic screened charged impurity
scattering in the semiconductor. We derive a leading behavior in the transport
property, which is exact in the strict 2D approximation and provides a zeroth
order explanation for the strength of metallicity in various 2D carrier
systems. By carefully comparing the calculated full nonlinear temperature
dependence of electronic resistivity at low temperatures with the corresponding
asymptotic analytic form obtained in the limit, both within the
RPA screened charged impurity scattering theory, we critically discuss the
applicability of the linear temperature dependent correction to the low
temperature resistivity in 2D semiconductor structures. We find quite generally
that for charged ionized impurity scattering screened by the electronic
dielectric function (within RPA or its suitable generalizations including local
field corrections), the resistivity obeys the asymptotic linear form only in
the extreme low temperature limit of . We point out the
experimental implications of our findings and discuss in the context of the
screening theory the relative strengths of metallicity in different 2D systems.Comment: We have substantially revised this paper by adding new materials and
figures including a detailed comparison to a recent experimen
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