RESUMO
We report an electronic magnetization measurement of a quantum point contact (QPC) based on nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. We find that NMR signals can be detected by measuring the QPC conductance under in-plane magnetic fields. This makes it possible to measure, from Knight shifts of the NMR spectra, the electronic magnetization of a QPC containing only a few electron spins. The magnetization changes smoothly with the QPC potential barrier height and peaks at the conductance plateau of 0.5×2e^{2}/h. The observed features are well captured by a model calculation assuming a smooth potential barrier, supporting a no bound state origin of the 0.7 structure.
RESUMO
We study the chaotic scattering through an Aharonov-Bohm ring containing two cavities. One of the cavities has well-separated resonant levels while the other is chaotic, and is treated by random matrix theory. The conductance through the ring is calculated analytically using the supersymmetry method and the quantum fluctuation effects are numerically investigated in detail. We find that the conductance is determined by the competition between the mean and fluctuation parts. The dephasing effect acts on the fluctuation part only. The Breit-Wigner resonant peak is changed to an antiresonance by increasing the ratio of the level broadening to the mean level spacing of the random cavity, and the asymmetric Fano form turns into a symmetric one. For the orthogonal and symplectic ensembles, the period of the Aharonov-Bohm oscillations is half of that for regular systems. The conductance distribution function becomes independent of the ensembles at the resonant point, which can be understood by the mode-locking mechanism. We also discuss the relation of our results to the random walk problem.
RESUMO
We investigate adiabatic pumping through a quantum dot with a single level in the mixed-valence and Kondo regimes using the slave boson mean field approximation. The pumped current is driven by a gauge potential due to time-dependent tunneling barriers as well as by the modulation of the Friedel phase. The sign of the former contribution depends on the strength of the Coulomb interaction. Under finite magnetic fields, the separation of the spin and charge currents peculiar to the Kondo effect occurs.