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Tunneling of correlated electrons in an ultrahigh magnetic field

Shan-Wen Tsai, D. L. Maslov, and L. I. Glazman
Phys. Rev. B 65, 241102(R) – Published 29 May 2002
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Abstract

Effects of the electron-electron interaction on tunneling into a metal in an ultrahigh magnetic field (ultraquantum limit) are studied. The range of the interaction is found to have a decisive effect both on the nature of the field-induced instability of the ground state and on the properties of the system at energies above the corresponding gap. For a short-range repulsive interaction, tunneling is dominated by the renormalization of the coupling constant, which leads eventually to the charge-density wave instability. For a long-range interaction, there exists an intermediate energy range in which the conductance obeys a power-law scaling form, similar to that of a one-dimensional Luttinger liquid. The exponent is magnetic-field dependent, and more surprisingly, may be positive or negative, i.e., interactions may either suppress or enhance the tunneling conductance compared to its noninteracting value. At energies near the gap, scaling breaks down and tunneling is again dominated by the instability, which in this case is an (anisotropic) Wigner-crystal instability.

  • Received 7 March 2002

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.65.241102

©2002 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Shan-Wen Tsai1, D. L. Maslov1, and L. I. Glazman2

  • 1Institute for Fundamental Theory and Department of Physics, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611
  • 2Theoretical Physics Institute, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455

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Issue

Vol. 65, Iss. 24 — 15 June 2002

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