6,565 research outputs found
Anomalous Josephson Current in Junctions with Spin-Polarizing Quantum Point Contacts
We consider a ballistic Josephson junction with a quantum point contact in a
two-dimensional electron gas with Rashba spin-orbit coupling. The point contact
acts as a spin filter when embedded in a circuit with normal electrodes. We
show that with an in-plane external magnetic field an anomalous supercurrent
appears even for zero phase difference between the superconducting electrodes.
In addition, the external field induces large critical current asymmetries
between the two flow directions, leading to supercurrent rectifying effects.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to appear in PR
Emergence of a negative charging energy in a metallic dot capacitively coupled to a superconducting island
We consider the hybrid setup formed by a metallic dot, capacitively coupled
to a superconducting island S connected to a bulk superconductor by a Josephson
junction. Charge fluctuations in S act as a dynamical gate and overscreen the
electronic repulsion in the metallic dot, producing an attractive interaction
between two additional electrons. As the offset charge of the metallic dot is
increased, the dot charging curve shows positive steps () followed by
negative ones () signaling the occurrence of a negative differential
capacitance. A proposal for experimental detection is given, and potential
applications in nanoelectronics are mentioned.Comment: Revised version, 4 pages, 4 figure
Phonon Squeezing in a Superconducting Molecular Transistor
Josephson transport through a single molecule or carbon nanotube is
considered in the presence of a local vibrational mode coupled to the
electronic charge. The ground-state solution is obtained exactly in the limit
of a large superconducting gap, and is extended to the general case by
variational analysis. Coherent charge fluctuations are entangled with
non-classical phonon states. The Josephson current induces squeezing of the
phonon mode, which is controlled by the superconducting phase difference and by
the junction asymmetry. Optical probes of non-classical phonon states are
briefly discussed
Spin-orbit induced chirality of Andreev states in Josephson junctions
We study Josephson junctions (JJs) in which the region between the two
superconductors is a multichannel system with Rashba spin-orbit coupling (SOC)
where a barrier or a quantum point contact (QPC) is present. These systems
might present unconventional Josephson effects such as Josephson currents for
zero phase difference or critical currents that \textit{depend on} the current
direction. Here, we discuss how the spin polarizing properties of the system in
the normal state affect the spin characteristic of the Andreev bound states
inside the junction. This results in a strong correlation between the spin of
the Andreev states and the direction in which they transport Cooper pairs.
While the current-phase relation for the JJ at zero magnetic field is
qualitatively unchanged by SOC, in the presence of a weak magnetic field a
strongly anisotropic behavior and the mentioned anomalous Josephson effects
follow. We show that the situation is not restricted to barriers based on
constrictions such as QPCs and should generically arise if in the normal system
the direction of the carrier's spin is linked to its direction of motion.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figures. To appear in PR
Spin noise and Bell inequalities in a realistic superconductor-quantum dot entangler
Charge and spin current correlations are analyzed in a source of
spin-entangled electrons built from a superconductor and two quantum dots in
parallel. In addition to the ideal (crossed Andreev) channel, parasitic
channels (direct Andreev and cotunneling) and spin flip processes are fully
described in a density matrix framework. The way they reduce both the
efficiency and the fidelity of the entangler is quantitatively described by
analyzing the zero-frequency noise correlations of charge current as well as
spin current in the two output branches. Spin current noise is characterized by
a spin Fano factor, equal to 0 (total current noise) and -1 (crossed
correlations) for an ideal entangler. The violation of the Bell inequalities,
as a test of non-locality (entanglement) of split pairs, is formulated in terms
of the correlations of electron charge and spin numbers counted in a specific
time window . The efficiency of the test is analyzed, comparing to
the various time scales in the entangler operation.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, references added, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Transport through side-coupled double quantum dots: from weak to strong interdot coupling
We report low-temperature transport measurements through a double quantum dot
device in a configuration where one of the quantum dots is coupled directly to
the source and drain electrodes, and a second (side-coupled) quantum dot
interacts electrostatically and via tunneling to the first one. As the interdot
coupling increases, a crossover from weak to strong interdot tunneling is
observed in the charge stability diagrams that present a complex pattern with
mergings and apparent crossings of Coulomb blockade peaks. While the weak
coupling regime can be understood by considering a single level on each dot, in
the intermediate and strong coupling regimes, the multi-level nature of the
quantum dots needs to be taken into account. Surprisingly, both in the strong
and weak coupling regimes, the double quantum dot states are mainly localized
on each dot for most values of the parameters. Only in an intermediate coupling
regime the device presents a single dot-like molecular behavior as the
molecular wavefunctions weight is evenly distributed between the quantum dots.
At temperatures larger than the interdot coupling energy scale, a loss of
coherence of the molecular states is observed.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Edge channel mixing induced by potential steps in an integer quantum Hall system
We investigate the coherent mixing of co-propagating edge channels in a
quantum Hall bar produced by step potentials. In the case of two edge channels
it is found that, although a single step induces only a few percent mixing, a
series of steps could yield 50% mixing. In addition, a strong mixing is found
when the potential height of a single step allows a different number of edge
channels on the two sides of the step. Charge density probability has been also
calculated even for the case where the step is smoothened.Comment: final version: 7 pages, 6 figure
Dynamical Generation of Extended Objects in a Dimensional Chiral Field Theory: Non-Perturbative Dirac Operator Resolvent Analysis
We analyze the dimensional Nambu-Jona-Lasinio model non-perturbatively.
In addition to its simple ground state saddle points, the effective action of
this model has a rich collection of non-trivial saddle points in which the
composite fields \sigx=\lag\bar\psi\psi\rag and \pix=\lag\bar\psi
i\gam_5\psi\rag form static space dependent configurations because of
non-trivial dynamics. These configurations may be viewed as one dimensional
chiral bags that trap the original fermions (``quarks") into stable extended
entities (``hadrons"). We provide explicit expressions for the profiles of
these objects and calculate their masses. Our analysis of these saddle points
is based on an explicit representation we find for the diagonal resolvent of
the Dirac operator in a \{\sigx, \pix\} background which produces a
prescribed number of bound states. We analyse in detail the cases of a single
as well as two bound states. We find that bags that trap fermions are the
most stable ones, because they release all the fermion rest mass as binding
energy and become massless. Our explicit construction of the diagonal resolvent
is based on elementary Sturm-Liouville theory and simple dimensional analysis
and does not depend on the large approximation. These facts make it, in our
view, simpler and more direct than the calculations previously done by Shei,
using the inverse scattering method following Dashen, Hasslacher, and Neveu.
Our method of finding such non-trivial static configurations may be applied to
other dimensional field theories
Addendum to Finite-size effects on multibody neutrino exchange
The interaction energy of the neutrons due to massless neutrino exchange in a
neutron star has recently been proved, using an effective theory, to be
extremely small and infrared-safe. Our comment here is of conceptual order: two
approaches to compute the total interaction energy density have recently been
proposed. Here, we study the connection between these two approaches. From CP
invariance, we argue that the resulting interaction energy has to be even in
the parameter , which expresses the static neutrino
potential created by a neutron medium of density .Comment: Latex file (Revtex), 9 pages, 1 figure, one reference change
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