1,021 research outputs found

    Nonadiabatic quantum pumping in mesoscopic nanostructures

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    We consider a nonadiabatic quantum pumping phenomena in a ballistic narrow constriction. The pumping is induced by a potential that has both spatial and temporal periodicity characterized by KK and Ω\Omega. In the zero frequency (Ω=0\Omega=0) limit, the transmission through narrow constriction exhibits valley structures due to the opening up of energy gaps in the pumping region -- a consequence of the KK periodicity. These valley structures remain robust in the regime of finite Ω\Omega, while their energies of occurrence are shifted by about Ω/2\hbar\Omega/2. The direction of these energy shifts depend on the directions of both the phase-velocity of the pumping potential and the transmitting electrons. This frequency dependent feature of the valley structures gives rise to both the asymmetry in the transmission coefficients and the pumping current. An experimental setup is suggested for a possible observation of our nonadiabatic quantum pumping findings.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure

    Differential conductance of a saddle-point constriction with a time-modulated gate-voltage

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    The effect of a time-modulated gate-voltage on the differential conductance GG of a saddle-point constriction is studied. The constriction is modeled by a symmetric saddle-point potential and the time-modulated gate-voltage is represented by a potential of the form V0θ(a/2xxc)cos(ωt)V_{0} \theta(a/2-|x-x_{c}|) \cos (\omega t). For ω\hbar\omega less than half of the transverse subband energy level spacing, gate-voltage-assisted (suppressed) feature occurs when the chemical potential μ\mu is less (greater) than but close to the threshold energy of a subband. As μ\mu increases, GG is found to exhibit, alternatively, the assisted and the suppressed feature. For larger ω\hbar\omega, these two features may overlap with one another. Dip structures are found in the suppressed regime. Mini-steps are found in the assisted regime only when the gate-voltage covers region far enough away from the center of the constriction.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure

    Finite Mass Effect on Two Photon Processes in Hydrogenic Systems: Effective Scalar Photon Interaction

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    We consider a hydrogenic system with a nucleus of finite mass. The coupling of the radiation field to the center of mass motion gives rise to an effective scalar type coupling. This induced scalar photon interaction emerges as a correction in competition with the usual multipole interactions. This effect is particularly important in positronium where the electric quadrupole interaction is totally suppressed. We illustrate this effect with the two-photon decay of metastable hydrogenic systems.Comment: 12 pages, Latex, no figure. Version to appear in Phys. Lett.

    Strings and D-Branes with Boundaries

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    The covariant field equations of ten-dimensional super D-branes are obtained by considering fundamental strings whose ends lie in the superworldsurface of the D-brane. By considering in a similar fashion Dp-branes ending on D(p+2)-branes we derive equations describing D-branes with dual potentials, as well as the vector potentials.Comment: 12 pages, Late

    Coherent quantum transport in the presence of a finite-range transversely polarized time-dependent field

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    This work investigates the quantum transport in a narrow constriction acted upon by a finite-range transversely polarized time-dependent electric field. A generalized scattering-matrix method is developed that has incorporated a time-dependent mode-matching scheme. The transverse field induces coherent inelastic scatterings that include both intersubband and intersideband transitions. These scatterings give rise to the dc conductance GG a general suppressed feature that escalates with the chemical potential. In addition, particular suppressed features -- the dip structures -- are found in GG. These features are recognized as the quasi-bound-state (QBS) features that arise from electrons making intersubband transitions to the vicinity of a subband bottom. For the case of larger field intensities, the QBS features that involve more photons are more evident. These QBS features are closely associated with the singular density of states at the subband bottoms. An experimental setup is proposed for the observation of these features.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure

    Open Superbranes

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    Open branes ending on other branes, which may be referred to as the host branes, are studied in the superembedding formalism. The open brane, host brane and the target space in which they are both embedded are all taken to be supermanifolds. It is shown that the superspace constraints satisfied by the open brane are sufficient to determine the corresponding superspace constraints for the host branes, whose dynamics are determined by these constraints. As a byproduct, one also obtains information about the boundary of the open brane propagating in the host brane.Comment: 12 pages, late

    Transport spectroscopy in a time-modulated open quantum dot

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    We have investigated the time-modulated coherent quantum transport phenomena in a ballistic open quantum dot. The conductance GG and the electron dwell time in the dots are calculated by a time-dependent mode-matching method. Under high-frequency modulation, the traversing electrons are found to exhibit three types of resonant scatterings. They are intersideband scatterings: into quasibound states in the dots, into true bound states in the dots, and into quasibound states just beneath the subband threshold in the leads. Dip structures or fano structures in GG are their signatures. Our results show structures due to 2ω\hbar\omega intersideband processes. At the above scattering resonances, we have estimated, according to our dwell time calculation, the number of round-trip scatterings that the traversing electrons undertake between the two dot openings.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure

    Non-Linear Sigma Model on the Fuzzy Supersphere

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    In this note we develop fuzzy versions of the supersymmetric non-linear sigma model on the supersphere S^(2,2). In hep-th/0212133 Bott projectors have been used to obtain the fuzzy CP^1 model. Our approach utilizes the use of supersymmetric extensions of these projectors. Here we obtain these (super) -projectors and quantize them in a fashion similar to the one given in hep-th/0212133. We discuss the interpretation of the resulting model as a finite dimensional matrix model.Comment: 11 pages, LaTeX, corrected typo

    A toy model of open membrane field theory in constant 3-form flux

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    Based on an explicit computation of the scattering amplitude of four open membranes in a constant 3-form background, we construct a toy model of the field theory for open membranes in the large C field limit. It is a generalization of the noncommutative field theories which describe open strings in a constant 2-form flux. The noncommutativity due to the B-field background is now replaced by a nonassociative triplet product. The triplet product satisfies the consistency conditions of lattice 3d gravity, which is inherent in the world-volume theory of open membranes. We show the UV/IR mixing of the toy model by computing some Feynman diagrams. Inclusion of the internal degree of freedom is also possible through the idea of the cubic matrix.Comment: 31 pages, latex, 2 eps figure

    Noncommutative Scalar Field Coupled to Gravity

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    A model for a noncommutative scalar field coupled to gravity is proposed via an extension of the Moyal product. It is shown that there are solutions compatible with homogeneity and isotropy to first non-trivial order in the perturbation of the star-product, with the gravity sector described by a flat Robertson-Walker metric. We show that in the slow-roll regime of a typical chaotic inflationary scenario, noncommutativity has negligible impact.Comment: Revtex4, 6 pages. Final version to appear at Phys. Rev.
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