4,267 research outputs found
Electron interferometry in quantum Hall regime: Aharonov-Bohm effect of interacting electrons
An apparent h/fe Aharonov-Bohm flux period, where f is an integer, has been
reported in coherent quantum Hall devices. Such sub-period is not expected for
non-interacting electrons and thus is thought to result from interelectron
Coulomb interaction. Here we report experiments in a Fabry-Perot interferometer
comprised of two wide constrictions enclosing an electron island. By carefully
tuning the constriction front gates, we find a regime where interference
oscillations with period h/2e persist throughout the transition between the
integer quantum Hall plateaus 2 and 3, including half-filling. In a large
quantum Hall sample, a transition between integer plateaus occurs near
half-filling, where the bulk of the sample becomes delocalized and thus
dissipative bulk current flows between the counterpropagating edges
("backscattering"). In a quantum Hall constriction, where conductance is due to
electron tunneling, a transition between forward- and back-scattering is
expected near the half-filling. In our experiment, neither period nor amplitude
of the oscillations show a discontinuity at half-filling, indicating that only
one interference path exists throughout the transition. We also present
experiments and an analysis of the front-gate dependence of the phase of the
oscillations. The results point to a single physical mechanism of the observed
conductance oscillations: Aharonov-Bohm interference of interacting electrons
in quantum Hall regime.Comment: 10 pages, 4 Fig
Primary-Filling e/3 Quasiparticle Interferometer
We report experimental realization of a quasiparticle interferometer where
the entire system is in 1/3 primary fractional quantum Hall state. The
interferometer consists of chiral edge channels coupled by quantum-coherent
tunneling in two constrictions, thus enclosing an Aharonov-Bohm area. We
observe magnetic flux and charge periods h/e and e/3, equivalent to creation of
one quasielectron in the island. Quantum theory predicts a 3h/e flux period for
charge e/3, integer statistics particles. Accordingly, the observed periods
demonstrate the anyonic statistics of Laughlin quasiparticles
Entropy and Exact Matrix Product Representation of the Laughlin Wave Function
An analytical expression for the von Neumann entropy of the Laughlin wave
function is obtained for any possible bipartition between the particles
described by this wave function, for filling fraction nu=1. Also, for filling
fraction nu=1/m, where m is an odd integer, an upper bound on this entropy is
exhibited. These results yield a bound on the smallest possible size of the
matrices for an exact representation of the Laughlin ansatz in terms of a
matrix product state. An analytical matrix product state representation of this
state is proposed in terms of representations of the Clifford algebra. For
nu=1, this representation is shown to be asymptotically optimal in the limit of
a large number of particles
Chaos synchronization in gap-junction-coupled neurons
Depending on temperature the modified Hodgkin-Huxley (MHH) equations exhibit
a variety of dynamical behavior including intrinsic chaotic firing. We analyze
synchronization in a large ensemble of MHH neurons that are interconnected with
gap junctions. By evaluating tangential Lyapunov exponents we clarify whether
synchronous state of neurons is chaotic or periodic. Then, we evaluate
transversal Lyapunov exponents to elucidate if this synchronous state is stable
against infinitesimal perturbations. Our analysis elucidates that with weak gap
junctions, stability of synchronization of MHH neurons shows rather complicated
change with temperature. We, however, find that with strong gap junctions,
synchronous state is stable over the wide range of temperature irrespective of
whether synchronous state is chaotic or periodic. It turns out that strong gap
junctions realize the robust synchronization mechanism, which well explains
synchronization in interneurons in the real nervous system.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Vortex molecules in coherently coupled two-component Bose-Einstein condensates
A vortex molecule is predicted in rotating two-component Bose-Einstein
condensates whose internal hyperfine states are coupled coherently by an
external field. A vortex in one component and that in the other are connected
by a domain wall of the relative phase, constituting a "vortex molecule", which
features a nonaxisymmetric (pseudo)spin texture with a pair of merons. The
binding mechanism of the vortex molecule is discussed based on a generalized
nonlinear sigma model and a variational ansatz. The anisotropy of vortex
molecules is caused by the difference in the scattering lengths, yielding a
distorted vortex-molecule lattice in fast rotating condensates.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, greatly revised versio
Pressure-induced change of the pairing symmetry in superconducting CeCu2Si2
Low-temperature (T) heat-capacity measurements under hydrostatic pressure of
up to p=2.1 GPa have been performed on single-crystalline CeCu2Si2. A broad
superconducting (SC) region exists in the T-p phase diagram. In the
low-pressure region antiferromagnetic spin fluctuations and in the
high-pressure region valence fluctuations had previously been proposed to
mediate Cooper pairing. We could identify these two distinct SC regions. We
found different thermodynamic properties of the SC phase in both regions,
supporting the proposal that different mechanisms might be implied in the
formation of superconductivity.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Anisotropic two-dimensional Heisenberg model by Schwinger-boson Gutzwiller projected method
Two-dimensional Heisenberg model with anisotropic couplings in the and
directions () is considered. The model is first solved in the
Schwinger-boson mean-field approximation. Then the solution is Gutzwiller
projected to satisfy the local constraint that there is only one boson at each
site. The energy and spin-spin correlation of the obtained wavefunction are
calculated for systems with up to sites by means of the
variational Monte Carlo simulation. It is shown that the antiferromagnetic
long-range order remains down to the one-dimensional limit.Comment: 15 pages RevTex3.0, 4 figures, available upon request, GWRVB8-9
Ising transition in a one-dimensional quarter-filled electron system with dimerization
We examine critical properties of the quarter-filled one-dimensional Hubbard
model with dimerization and with the onsite and nearest-neighbor Coulomb
repulsion U and V. By utilizing the bosonization method, it is shown that the
system exhibits an Ising quantum phase transition from the Mott insulating
state to the charge-ordered insulating state. It is also shown that the
dielectric permittivity exhibits a strong enhancement as decreasing temperature
with power-law dependence at the Ising critical point.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, uses elsart.cls, Proc. Int. Symp. ISSP-Kashiwa
2001, submitted to J. Phys. Chem. Solid
Noise spectroscopy and interlayer phase-coherence in bilayer quantum Hall systems
Bilayer quantum Hall systems develop strong interlayer phase-coherence when
the distance between layers is comparable to the typical distance between
electrons within a layer. The phase-coherent state has until now been
investigated primarily via transport measurements. We argue here that
interlayer current and charge-imbalance noise studies in these systems will be
able to address some of the key experimental questions. We show that the
characteristic frequency of current-noise is that of the zero wavevector
collective mode, which is sensitive to the degree of order in the system. Local
electric potential noise measured in a plane above the bilayer system on the
other hand is sensitive to finite-wavevector collective modes and hence to the
soft-magnetoroton picture of the order-disorder phase transition.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Holographic Construction of Technicolor Theory
We construct a dual description of technicolor theory based on the D4/D8
brane configuration. A strongly-coupled technicolor theory is identified as the
effective theory on D-branes, and from the gauge/gravity correspondence, we
explore the weakly-coupled holographic description of dynamical electroweak
symmetry breaking. It is found from the D-brane probe action that the masses of
W and Z bosons are given by the decay constant of technipion, and the
technimesons become hierarchically heavy. Moreover, the couplings of heavier
modes to standard model fermions are rather suppressed. The oblique correction
parameters are also evaluated and found to be small except for the S parameter,
which can be reduced by modifying the model. The fermion fields are introduced
at the intersections of D-branes and their masses are generated via massive
gauge bosons from open strings stretching between D-branes.Comment: 23 pages; references added, minor change
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