4.6 Article

Coherence recovery mechanisms of quantum Hall edge states

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW B
Volume 97, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.97.115418

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation

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This paper is motivated by an unexpected observation in a recent experiment [S. Tewari et al., Phys. Rev. B 93, 035420 (2016).], where a robust coherence recovery, starting from a certain energy, was detected for an electron injected into a quantum Hall edge at a filling factor of 2. After passing through a quantum dot, the electron then tunnels into the edge with a subsequent propagation towards a symmetric Mach-Zender interferometer (MZI). Afterwards, the visibility of Aharonov-Bohm (AB) oscillations is measured. An earlier study, based on the bosonization framework with a linear spectrum of the edge excitations, predicted a decay of the visibility with increasing energy. We associate this result with the destructive interference of the two quasiparticles (charge and neutral modes), formed at the edge out of the incoming electron wave packet (WP). However, in reality, it might be suppressed due to an imbalance between the quasiparticles, for instance, in the presence of dispersion and/or dissipation. This idea could also be explored further experimentally by applying a periodic potential to the arms of the MZI and thus creating the imbalance. Yet another possibility to restore phase coherence, also based on dispersion and dissipation, accounts for a drop in the energy density of the electron WP by the time it arrives at the interferometer, leading to a significantly smaller dephasing inside it. We then show that the energy density is defined by a parameter completely independent of the injected energy, which naturally explains the emergence of threshold energy in the experiment.

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