1,308 research outputs found
Mesoscopic Transport: The Electron-Gas Sum Rules in a Driven Quantum Point Contact
The nature of the electron gas is characterized, above all, by its
multi-particle correlations. The conserving sum rules for the electron gas have
been thoroughly studied for many years, and their centrality to the physics of
metallic conduction is widely understood (at least in the many-body community).
We review the role of the conserving sum rules in mesoscopic transport, as
normative criteria for assessing the conserving status of mesoscopic models. In
themselves, the sum rules are specific enough to rule out any such theory if it
fails to respect the conservation laws. Of greater interest is the capacity of
the compressibility sum rule, in particular, to reveal unexpected fluctuation
effects in nonuniform mesoscopic structures.Comment: TeX, 11pp, no fi
Transport properties in antiferromagnetic quantum Griffiths phases
We study the electrical resistivity in the quantum Griffiths phase associated
with the antiferromagnetic quantum phase transition in a metal. The resistivity
is calculated by means of the semi-classical Boltzmann equation. We show that
the scattering of electrons by locally ordered rare regions leads to a singular
temperature dependence. The rare-region contribution to the resistivity varies
as with temperature where the is the usual Griffiths
exponent which takes the value zero at the critical point and increases with
distance from criticality. We find similar singular contributions to other
transport properties such as thermal resistivity, thermopower and the Peltier
coefficient. We also compare our results with existing experimental data and
suggest new experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Electronic Detection of Gravitational Disturbances and Collective Coulomb Interactions
The cross section for a gravitational wave antenna to absorb a graviton may
be directly expressed in terms of the non-local viscous response function of
the metallic crystal. Crystal viscosity is dominated by electronic processes
which then also dominate the graviton absorption rate. To compute this rate
from a microscopic Hamiltonian, one must include the full Coulomb interaction
in the Maxwell electric field pressure and also allow for strongly
non-adiabatic transitions in the electronic kinetic pressure. The view that the
electrons and phonons constitute ideal gases with a weak electron phonon
interaction is not sufficiently accurate for estimating the full strength of
the electronic interaction with a gravitational wave.Comment: 7 pages LaTeX 1 figure afig1.ep
Low-temperature thermal conductivity in polycrystalline graphene
The low-temperature thermal conductivity in polycrystalline graphene is
theoretically studied. The contributions from three branches of acoustic
phonons are calculated by taking into account scattering on sample borders,
point defects and grain boundaries. Phonon scattering due to sample borders and
grain boundaries is shown to result in a -behaviour in the thermal
conductivity where varies between 1 and 2. This behaviour is found to
be more pronounced for nanosized grain boundaries.
PACS: 65.80.Ck, 81.05.ue, 73.43.C
Quantum transport on small-world networks: A continuous-time quantum walk approach
We consider the quantum mechanical transport of (coherent) excitons on
small-world networks (SWN). The SWN are build from a one-dimensional ring of N
nodes by randomly introducing B additional bonds between them. The exciton
dynamics is modeled by continuous-time quantum walks and we evaluate
numerically the ensemble averaged transition probability to reach any node of
the network from the initially excited one. For sufficiently large B we find
that the quantum mechanical transport through the SWN is, first, very fast,
given that the limiting value of the transition probability is reached very
quickly; second, that the transport does not lead to equipartition, given that
on average the exciton is most likely to be found at the initial node.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures (high quality figures available upon request
Ballistic magnon transport and phonon scattering in the antiferromagnet NdCuO
The thermal conductivity of the antiferromagnet NdCuO was measured
down to 50 mK. Using the spin-flop transition to switch on and off the acoustic
Nd magnons, we can reliably separate the magnon and phonon contributions to
heat transport. We find that magnons travel ballistically below 0.5 K, with a
thermal conductivity growing as , from which we extract their velocity. We
show that the rate of scattering of acoustic magnons by phonons grows as ,
and the scattering of phonons by magnons peaks at twice the average Nd magnon
frequency.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, one figure modifie
Weak spin-orbit interactions induce exponentially flat mini-bands in magnetic metals without inversion symmetry
In metallic magnets like MnSi the interplay of two very weak spin-orbit
coupling effects can strongly modify the Fermi surface. In the absence of
inversion symmetry even a very small Dzyaloshinsky-Moriya interaction of
strength delta<<1 distorts a ferromagnetic state into a chiral helix with a
long pitch of order 1/delta. We show that additional small spin-orbit coupling
terms of order delta in the band structure lead to the formation of
exponentially flat minibands with a bandwidth of order exp(-1/sqrt(delta))
parallel to the direction of the helix. These flat minibands cover a rather
broad belt of width sqrt(delta) on the Fermi surface where electron motion
parallel to the helix practically stops. We argue that these peculiar
band-structure effects lead to pronounced features in the anomalous skin
effect.Comment: 7 pages, minor corrections, references adde
Nonlinear tunneling in two-dimensional lattices
We present thorough analysis of the nonlinear tunneling of Bose-Einstein
condensates in static and accelerating two-dimensional lattices within the
framework of the mean-field approximation. We deal with nonseparable lattices
considering different initial atomic distributions in the highly symmetric
states. For analytical description of the condensate before instabilities are
developed, we derive several few-mode models, analyzing both essentially
nonlinear and quasi-linear regimes of tunneling. By direct numerical
simulations, we show that two-mode models provide accurate description of the
tunneling when either initially two states are populated or tunneling occurs
between two stable states. Otherwise a two-mode model may give only useful
qualitative hints for understanding tunneling but does not reproduce many
features of the phenomenon. This reflects crucial role of the instabilities
developed due to two-body interactions resulting in non-negligible population
of the higher bands. This effect becomes even more pronounced in the case of
accelerating lattices. In the latter case we show that the direction of the
acceleration is a relevant physical parameter which affects the tunneling by
changing the atomic rates at different symmetric states and by changing the
numbers of bands involved in the atomic transfer
Zener tunneling in two-dimensional photonic lattices
We discuss the interband light tunneling in a two-dimensional periodic
photonic structure, as was studied recently in experiments for
optically-induced photonic lattices [H. Trompeter et al., Phys. Rev. Lett.
\textbf{96}, 053903 (2006)]. We identify the Zener tunneling regime at the
crossing of two Bloch bands, which occurs in a generic case of the Bragg
reflection when the Bloch index crosses the edge of the irreducible Brillouin
zone. Similarly, the higher-order Zener tunneling involves four Bloch bands
when the Bloch index passes through a high-symmetry point on the edge of the
Brillouin zone. We derive simple analytical models that describe the tunneling
effect, and calculate the corresponding tunneling probabilities.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Phys Rev E; changes: band structure
added (fig1) and the error estimates for the Landau-Zener model (fig 6
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