69 research outputs found
Tunneling Conductance Between Parallel Two Dimensional Electron Systems
We derive and evaluate expressions for the low temperature {\it dc}
equilibrium tunneling conductance between parallel two-dimensional electron
systems. Our theory is based on a linear-response formalism and on
impurity-averaged perturbation theory. The disorder broadening of features in
the dependence of tunneling conductance on sheet densities and in-plane
magnetic field strengths is influenced both by the finite lifetime of electrons
within the wells and by non-momentum-conserving tunneling events. Disorder
vertex corrections are important only for weak in-plane magnetic fields and
strong interwell impurity-potential correlations. We comment on the basis of
our results on the possibility of using tunneling measurements to determine the
lifetime of electrons in the quantum wells.Comment: 14 pages, 5 Fig. not included, revtex, IUcm92-00
Lifetime of Two-Dimensional Electrons Measured by Tunneling Spectroscopy
For electrons tunneling between parallel two-dimensional electron systems,
conservation of in-plane momentum produces sharply resonant current-voltage
characteristics and provides a uniquely sensitive probe of the underlying
electronic spectral functions. We report here the application of this technique
to accurate measurements of the temperature dependence of the electron-electron
scattering rate in clean two-dimensional systems. Our results are in
qualitative agreement with existing calculations.Comment: file in REVTEX format produces 11 pages, 3 figures available from
[email protected]
Mesoscopic effects in tunneling between parallel quantum wires
We consider a phase-coherent system of two parallel quantum wires that are
coupled via a tunneling barrier of finite length. The usual perturbative
treatment of tunneling fails in this case, even in the diffusive limit, once
the length L of the coupling region exceeds a characteristic length scale L_t
set by tunneling. Exact solution of the scattering problem posed by the
extended tunneling barrier allows us to compute tunneling conductances as a
function of applied voltage and magnetic field. We take into account charging
effects in the quantum wires due to applied voltages and find that these are
important for 1D-to-1D tunneling transport.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, improved Figs., added Refs. and appendix, to
appear in Phys. Rev.
Tunneling Between Two-Dimensional Electron Gases in a Strong Magnetic Field
We have measured the tunneling between two two-dimensional electron gases at
high magnetic fields , when the carrier densities of the two electron layers
are matched. For filling factors , there is a gap in the current-voltage
characteristics centered about , followed by a tunneling peak at ~mV. Both features have been observed before and have been attributed to
electron-electron interactions within a layer. We have measured high field
tunneling peak positions and fitted gap parameters that are proportional to
, and independent of the carrier densities of the two layers. This suggests
a different origin for the gap to that proposed by current theories, which
predict a dependence.Comment: 9 pages, cond-mat/yymmnn
Computational geometry analysis of dendritic spines by structured illumination microscopy
We are currently short of methods that can extract objective parameters of dendritic spines useful for their categorization. Authors present in this study an automatic analytical pipeline for spine geometry using 3D-structured illumination microscopy, which can effectively extract many geometrical parameters of dendritic spines without bias and automatically categorize spine population based on their morphological feature
Wave propagation based calculation of bit error rates for a 2FSK-system in indoor environments
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