46,598 research outputs found

    Correlations weak and strong: divers guises of the two-dimensional electron gas

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    The three-dimensional electron-gas model has been a major focus for many-body theory applied to the electronic properties of metals and semiconductors. Because the model neglects band effects, whereas electronic systems are generally more strongly correlated in narrow band systems, it is most widely used to describe the qualitative physics of weakly correlated metals with unambiguous Fermi liquid properties. The model is more interesting in two space dimensions because it provides a quantitative description of electrons in quantum wells and because these can form strongly correlated many-particle states. We illustrate the range of possible many-particle behaviors by discussing the way correlations are manifested in 2D tunneling spectroscopy experiments.Comment: Based on talk at MBIX conference, Sydney, July 1997. 12 pages, 3 figure

    Spintronic Spin Accumulation and Thermodynamics

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    The spin degree of freedom can play an essential role in determining the electrical transport properties of spin-polarized electron systems in metals or semiconductors. In this article, I address the dependence of spin-subsystem chemical potentials on accumulated spin-densities. I discuss both approaches which can be used to measure this fundamental thermodynamic quantity and the microscopic physics which determines its value in several different systems.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures. Based on lecture given at the XVI Sitges Conference, June 1999. Proceedings to be published by Springer-Verla

    Orbital order in bilayer graphene at filling factor ν=−1\nu =-1

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    In a graphene bilayer with Bernal stacking both n=0n=0 and n=1n=1 orbital Landau levels have zero kinetic energy. An electronic state in the N=0 Landau level consequently has three quantum numbers in addition to its guiding center label: its spin, its valley index KK or K′K^{\prime}, and an orbital quantum number n=0,1.n=0,1. The two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) in the bilayer supports a wide variety of broken-symmetry states in which the pseudospins associated these three quantum numbers order in a manner that is dependent on both filling factor ν\nu and the electric potential difference between the layers. In this paper, we study the case of ν=−1\nu =-1 in an external field strong enough to freeze electronic spins. We show that an electric potential difference between layers drives a series of transitions, starting from interlayer-coherent states (ICS) at small potentials and leading to orbitally coherent states (OCS) that are polarized in a single layer. Orbital pseudospins carry electric dipoles with orientations that are ordered in the OCS and have Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interactions that can lead to spiral instabilities. We show that the microwave absorption spectra of ICSs, OCSs, and the mixed states that occur at intermediate potentials are sharply distinct.Comment: 21 pages, 14 figure

    Interactions suppress Quasiparticle Tunneling at Hall Bar Constrictions

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    Tunneling of fractionally charged quasiparticles across a two-dimensional electron system on a fractional quantum Hall plateau is expected to be strongly enhanced at low temperatures. This theoretical prediction is at odds with recent experimental studies of samples with weakly-pinched quantum-point-contact constrictions, in which the opposite behavior is observed. We argue here that this unexpected finding is a consequence of electron-electron interactions near the point contact.Comment: 4 page

    Universal one-way light speed from a universal light speed over closed paths

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    This paper gives two complete and elementary proofs that if the speed of light over closed paths has a universal value cc, then it is possible to synchronize clocks in such a way that the one-way speed of light is c. The first proof is an elementary version of a recent proof. The second provides high precision experimental evidence that it is possible to synchronize clocks in such a way that the one-way speed of light has a universal value. We also discuss an old incomplete proof by Weyl which is important from an historical perspective.Comment: RevTex4, 6 pages, 2 figures, uses psfrag. New sections added, discussion expande
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