Nature of the many-body excitations in a quantum wire: Theory and experiment

O. Tsyplyatyev, A. J. Schofield, Y. Jin, M. Moreno, W. K. Tan, A. S. Anirban, C. J. B. Ford, J. P. Griffiths, I. Farrer, G. A. C. Jones, and D. A. Ritchie
Phys. Rev. B 93, 075147 – Published 24 February 2016

Abstract

The natural excitations of an interacting one-dimensional system at low energy are the hydrodynamic modes of a Luttinger liquid, protected by the Lorentz invariance of the linear dispersion. We show that beyond low energies, where the quadratic dispersion reduces the symmetry to Galilean, the main character of the many-body excitations changes into a hierarchy: calculations of dynamic correlation functions for fermions (without spin) show that the spectral weights of the excitations are proportional to powers of R2/L2, where R is a length-scale related to interactions and L is the system length. Thus only small numbers of excitations carry the principal spectral power in representative regions on the energy-momentum planes. We have analyzed the spectral function in detail and have shown that the first-level (strongest) excitations form a mode with parabolic dispersion, like that of a renormalized single particle. The second-level excitations produce a singular power-law line shape to the first-level mode and multiple power laws at the spectral edge. We have illustrated a crossover to a Luttinger liquid at low energy by calculating the local density of states through all energy scales: from linear to nonlinear, and to above the chemical potential energies. In order to test this model, we have carried out experiments to measure the momentum-resolved tunneling of electrons (fermions with spin) from/to a wire formed within a GaAs heterostructure. We observe a well-resolved spin-charge separation at low energy with appreciable interaction strength and only a parabolic dispersion of the first-level mode at higher energies. We find a structure resembling the second-level excitations, which dies away rapidly at high momentum in line with the theoretical predictions here.

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  • Received 28 August 2015
  • Revised 18 January 2016
  • Corrected 9 March 2016

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.93.075147

©2016 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Condensed Matter, Materials & Applied Physics

Corrections

9 March 2016

Erratum

Publisher's Note: Nature of the many-body excitations in a quantum wire: Theory and experiment [Phys. Rev. B 93, 075147 (2016)]

O. Tsyplyatyev, A. J. Schofield, Y. Jin, M. Moreno, W. K. Tan, A. S. Anirban, C. J. B. Ford, J. P. Griffiths, I. Farrer, G. A. C. Jones, and D. A. Ritchie
Phys. Rev. B 93, 119908 (2016)

Authors & Affiliations

O. Tsyplyatyev1, A. J. Schofield2, Y. Jin3, M. Moreno3, W. K. Tan3, A. S. Anirban3, C. J. B. Ford3, J. P. Griffiths3, I. Farrer3, G. A. C. Jones3, and D. A. Ritchie3

  • 1Institut für Theoretische Physik, Universität Frankfurt, Max-von-Laue Strasse 1, 60438 Frankfurt, Germany
  • 2School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, B15 2TT, United Kingdom
  • 3Cavendish Laboratory, University of Cambridge, J J Thomson Avenue, Cambridge, CB3 0HE, United Kingdom

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Issue

Vol. 93, Iss. 7 — 15 February 2016

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