5,399 research outputs found
Noise at a Fermi-edge singularity
We present noise measurements of self-assembled InAs quantum dots at high
magnetic fields. In comparison to I-V characteristics at zero magnetic field we
notice a strong current overshoot which is due to a Fermi-edge singularity. We
observe an enhanced suppression in the shot noise power simultaneous to the
current overshoot which is attributed to the electron-electron interaction in
the Fermi-edge singularity
Reply to the correspondence: "On the fracture toughness of bioinspired ceramic materials"
This is a reply to the correspondence of Prof. Robert Ritchie: "On the
fracture toughness of bioinspired ceramic materials", submitted to Nature
Materials, which discusses the fracture toughness values of the following
papers: Bouville, F., Maire, E., Meille, S., Van de Moort\`ele, B., Stevenson,
A. J., & Deville, S. (2014). Strong, tough and stiff bioinspired ceramics from
brittle constituents. Nature Materials, 13(5), 508-514 and Le Ferrand, H.,
Bouville, F., Niebel, T. P., & Studart, A. R. (2015). Magnetically assisted
slip casting of bioinspired heterogeneous composites. Nature Materials, 14(11),
1172-1172.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Enhanced Shot Noise in Tunneling through a Stack of Coupled Quantum Dots
We have investigated the noise properties of the tunneling current through
vertically coupled self-assembled InAs quantum dots. We observe
super-Poissonian shot noise at low temperatures. For increased temperature this
effect is suppressed. The super-Poissonian noise is explained by capacitive
coupling between different stacks of quantum dots
Measurement of the electron drift velocity for directional dark matter detectors
Three-dimensional track reconstruction is a key issue for directional Dark
Matter detection. It requires a precise knowledge of the electron drift
velocity. Magboltz simulations are known to give a good evaluation of this
parameter. However, large TPC operated underground on long time scale may be
characterized by an effective electron drift velocity that may differ from the
value evaluated by simulation. In situ measurement of this key parameter is
hence a way to avoid bias in the 3D track reconstruction. We present a
dedicated method for the measurement of the electron drift velocity with the
MIMAC detector. It is tested on two gas mixtures : and . We also show that adding allows us to lower the
electron drift velocity while keeping almost the same Fluorine content of the
gas mixture.Comment: Proceedings of the 4th international conference on Directional
Detection of Dark Matter (CYGNUS 2013), 10-12 June 2013, Toyama, Japa
In situ measurement of the electron drift velocity for upcoming directional Dark Matter detectors
Three-dimensional track reconstruction is a key issue for directional Dark
Matter detection and it requires a precise knowledge of the electron drift
velocity. Magboltz simulations are known to give a good evaluation of this
parameter. However, large TPC operated underground on long time scale may be
characterized by an effective electron drift velocity that may differ from the
value evaluated by simulation. In situ measurement of this key parameter is
hence needed as it is a way to avoid bias in the 3D track reconstruction. We
present a dedicated method for the measurement of the electron drift velocity
with the MIMAC detector. It is tested on two gas mixtures: CF4 and CF4 + CHF3.
The latter has been chosen for the MIMAC detector as we expect that adding CHF3
to pure CF4 will lower the electron drift velocity. This is a key point for
directional Dark Matter as the track sampling along the drift field will be
improved while keeping almost the same Fluorine content of the gas mixture. We
show that the drift velocity at 50 mbar is reduced by a factor of about 5 when
adding 30% of CHF3.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures. Minor corrections, matches published version in
JINS
Fermi Edge Singularities in Transport through Quantum Dots
We study the Fermi-edge singularity appearing in the current-voltage
characteristics for resonant tunneling through a localized level at finite
temperature. An explicit expression for the current at low temperature and near
the threshold for the tunneling process is presented which allows to coalesce
data taken at different temperatures to a single curve. Based on this scaling
function for the current we analyze experimental data from a GaAs-AlAs-GaAs
tunneling device with embedded InAs quantum dots obtained at low temperatures
in high magnetic fields.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
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