576 research outputs found

    Energy transport by neutral collective excitations at the quantum Hall edge

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    We use the edge of the quantum Hall sample to study the possibility for counter-propagating neutral collective excitations. A novel sample design allows us to independently investigate charge and energy transport along the edge. We experimentally observe an upstream energy transfer with respect to the electron drift for the filling factors 1 and 1/3. Our analysis indicates that a neutral collective mode at the interaction-reconstructed edge is a proper candidate for the experimentally observed effect.Comment: Final version, as appear in PR

    A charge-driven feedback loop in the resonance fluorescence of a single quantum dot

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    Semiconductor quantum dots can emit antibunched, single photons on demand with narrow linewidths. However, the observed linewidths are broader than lifetime measurements predict, due to spin and charge noise in the environment. This noise randomly shifts the transition energy and destroys coherence and indistinguishability of the emitted photons. Fortunately, the fluctuations can be reduced by a stabilization using a suitable feedback loop. In this work we demonstrate a fast feedback loop that manifests itself in a strong hysteresis and bistability of the exciton resonance fluorescence signal. Field ionization of photogenerated quantum dot excitons leads to the formation of a charged interface layer that drags the emission line along over a frequency range of more than 30 GHz. This internal charge-driven feedback loop could be used to reduce the spectral diffusion and stabilize the emission frequency within milliseconds, presently only limited by the sample structure, but already faster than nuclear spin feedback

    Waveform sampling using an adiabatically driven electron ratchet in a two-dimensional electron system

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    We utilize a time-periodic ratchet-like potential modulation imposed onto a two-dimensional electron system inside a GaAs/Alx_xGa1x_{1-x}As heterostructure to evoke a net dc pumping current. The modulation is induced by two sets of interdigitated gates, interlacing off center, which can be independently addressed. When the transducers are driven by two identical but phase-shifted ac signals, a lateral dc pumping current I(ϕ)I(\phi) results, which strongly depends on both, the phase shift ϕ\phi and the waveform V(t)V(t) of the imposed gate voltages. We find that for different periodic signals, the phase dependence I(ϕ)I(\phi) closely resembles V(t)V(t). A simple linear model of adiabatic pumping in two-dimensional electron systems is presented, which reproduces well our experimental findings.Comment: 3 figure

    Electrical read-out of the local nuclear polarization in the quantum Hall effect

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    It is demonstrated that the now well-established `flip-flop' mechanism of spin exchange between electrons and nuclei in the quantum Hall effect can be reversed. We use a sample geometry which utilizes separately contacted edge states to establish a local nuclear spin polarization --close to the maximum value achievable-- by driving a current between electron states of different spin orientation. When the externally applied current is switched off, the sample exhibits an output voltage of up to a few tenths of a meV, which decays with a time constant typical for the nuclear spin relaxation. The surprizing fact that a sample with a local nuclear spin polarization can act as a source of energy and that this energy is well above the nuclear Zeeman splitting is explained by a simple model which takes into account the effect of a local Overhauser shift on the edge state reconstruction.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev. Let

    Photon noise suppression by a built-in feedback loop

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    Visionary quantum photonic networks need transform-limited single photons on demand. Resonance fluorescence on a quantum dot provides the access to a solid-state single photon source, where the environment is unfortunately the source of spin and charge noise that leads to fluctuations of the emission frequency and destroys the needed indistinguishability. We demonstrate a built-in stabilization approach for the photon stream, which relies solely on charge carrier dynamics of a two-dimensional hole gas inside a micropillar structure. The hole gas is fed by hole tunneling from field-ionized excitons and influences the energetic position of the excitonic transition by changing the local electric field at the position of the quantum dot. The standard deviation of the photon noise is suppressed by nearly 50 percent (noise power reduction of 6 dB) and it works in the developed micropillar structure for frequencies up to 1 kHz. This built-in feedback loop represents an easy way for photon noise suppression in large arrays of single photon emitters and promises to reach higher bandwidth by device optimization.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figure

    Scanning Tunneling Microscopy Study of InAs epitaxy on GaAs(001)

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