RESUMO
Melting of two-dimensional (2D) clusters of classical particles is studied using Brownian dynamics and Langevin molecular dynamics simulations. The particles are confined either by a circular hard wall or by a parabolic external potential and interact through a dipole or a screened Coulomb potential. We found that, with decreasing strength of the interparticle interaction, clusters with a short-range interparticle interaction and confined by a hard wall exhibit a reentrant behavior in its orientational order.
RESUMO
We study the ground state of two vertically coupled quantum dots as a function of the interdot distance within the spin density functional theory. The tunneling between the dots is included. For small and large interdot distances the atomic phases are recovered. For intermediate distances new molecule-type phases are predicted which can be observed experimentally in the addition energies. The results are interpreted in terms of an effective single particle picture and we find that Hund's rule breaks down for 11 and 12 electrons. The results are summarized in a phase diagram in which spin and isospin blockade regions are also found.
RESUMO
Cyclotron resonance (CR) of high density GaAs quantum wells exhibits well-resolved spin splitting above the LO-phonon frequency. The spin-up and spin-down CR frequencies are reversed relative to the order expected from simple band nonparabolicity. We demonstrate that this is a consequence of the blocking of the polaron interaction which is a sensitive function of the filling of the Landau levels.
RESUMO
As first pointed out by Bardeen and Ginzburg in the early sixties, the amount of magnetic flux carried by vortices in superconducting materials depends on their distance from the sample edge, and can be smaller than one flux quantum, phi0 = h/2e (where h is Planck's constant and e is the electronic charge). In bulk superconductors, this reduction of flux becomes negligible at submicrometre distances from the edge, but in thin films the effect may survive much farther into the material. But the effect has not been observed experimentally, and it is often assumed that magnetic field enters type II superconductors in units of phi0. Here we measure the amount of flux introduced by individual vortices in a superconducting film, finding that the flux always differs substantially from phi0. We have observed vortices that carry as little as 0.001phi0, as well as 'negative vortices', whose penetration leads to the expulsion of magnetic field. We distinguish two phenomena responsible for non-quantized flux penetration: the finite-size effect and a nonlinear screening of the magnetic field due to the presence of a surface barrier. The latter effect has not been considered previously, but is likely to cause non-quantized penetration in most cases.