13,064 research outputs found
Charge and spin state readout of a double quantum dot coupled to a resonator
State readout is a key requirement for a quantum computer. For
semiconductor-based qubit devices it is usually accomplished using a separate
mesoscopic electrometer. Here we demonstrate a simple detection scheme in which
a radio-frequency resonant circuit coupled to a semiconductor double quantum
dot is used to probe its charge and spin states. These results demonstrate a
new non-invasive technique for measuring charge and spin states in quantum dot
systems without requiring a separate mesoscopic detector
Sensitivity of the magnetic state of a spin lattice on itinerant electron orbital phase
Spatially extended localized spins can interact via indirect exchange
interaction through Friedel oscillations in the Fermi sea. In arrays of
localized spins such interaction can lead to a magnetically ordered phase.
Without external magnetic field such a phase is well understood via a
"two-impurity" Kondo model. Here we employ non-equilibrium transport
spectroscopy to investigate the role of the orbital phase of conduction
electrons on the magnetic state of a spin lattice. We show experimentally, that
even tiniest perpendicular magnetic field can influence the magnitude of the
inter-spin magnetic exchange.Comment: To be published in PhysicaE EP2DS proceedin
Giant Fluctuations of Coulomb Drag in a Bilayer System
We have observed reproducible fluctuations of the Coulomb drag, both as a
function of magnetic field and electron concentration, which are a
manifestation of quantum interference of electrons in the layers. At low
temperatures the fluctuations exceed the average drag, giving rise to random
changes of the sign of the drag. The fluctuations are found to be much larger
than previously expected, and we propose a model which explains their
enhancement by considering fluctuations of local electron properties.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Experimental position-time entanglement with degenerate single photons
We report an experiment in which two-photon interference occurs between
degenerate single photons that never meet. The two photons travel in opposite
directions through our fibre-optic interferometer and interference occurs when
the photons reach two different, spatially separated, 2-by-2 couplers at the
same time. We show that this experiment is analogous to the conventional
Franson-type entanglement experiment where the photons are entangled in
position and time. We measure wavefunction overlaps for the two photons as high
as 94 3%.Comment: Updated to published version, new fig. 4., corrected typo
Ballistic electron spectroscopy
We demonstrate the feasibility of ballistic electron spectroscopy as a new
tool for mesoscopic physics. A quantum dot is utilised as an energy-selective
detector of non-equilibrium ballistic electrons injected into a two-dimensional
electron system. In this paper we use a second quantum dot as the electron
injector to evaluate the scheme. We propose an application in the study of
interacting 1D and 0D systems.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figure
All-electrical injection and detection of a spin polarized current using 1D conductors
All-electrical control of spin transport in nanostructures has been the
central interest and chal- lenge of spin physics and spintronics. Here we
demonstrate on-chip spin polarizing/filtering actions by driving the
gate-defined one dimensional (1D) conductor, one of the simplest geometries for
integrated quantum devices, away from the conventional Ohmic regime. Direct
measurement of the spin polarization of the emitted current was performed when
the momentum degeneracy was lifted, wherein both the 1D polarizer for spin
injection and the analyzer for spin detection were demonstrated. The results
showed that a configuration of gates and applied voltages can give rise to a
tunable spin polarization, which has implications for the development of
spintronic devices and future quantum information processing.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Fano effect and Kondo effect in quantum dots formed in strongly coupled quantum wells
We present lateral transport measurements on strongly, vertically coupled
quantum dots formed in separate quantum wells in a GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure.
Coulomb oscillations are observed forming a honeycomb lattice consistent with
two strongly coupled dots. When the tunnel barriers in the upper well are
reduced we observe the Fano effect due to the interfering paths through a
resonant state in the lower well and a continuum state in the upper well. In
both regimes an in plane magnetic field reduces the coupling between the wells
when the magnetic length is comparable to the center to center separation of
the wells. We also observe the Kondo effect which allows the spin states of the
double dot system to be probed.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Some Empirical Criteria for Attributing Creativity to a Computer Program
Peer reviewedPostprin
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