2007 APS March Meeting 
Volume 52, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 5–9, 2007;
Denver, Colorado
Session U3: Quantum Chaos in Condensed Matter Physics
8:00 AM–11:00 AM, 
Thursday, March 8, 2007
Colorado Convention Center 
Room: Korbel 2A-3A
Sponsoring
Unit: 
DCMP
Chair: Wentao Lu, Northeastern University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2007.MAR.U3.3
Abstract: U3.00003 : Analog Experiments on Quantum Chaotic Scattering and Transport*
9:12 AM–9:48 AM
Preview Abstract
  
  Abstract  
Author:
Steven Anlage
(University of Maryland)
The transport properties of mesoscopic and nanoscopic materials are 
dominated by quantum interference effects. Nevertheless it is
challenging to 
delineate these effects through conventional transport
experiments on real 
materials. Complications arise from finite temperatures (thermal
smearing, 
inelastic scattering), and the excitation of two-level systems
that can 
cause the electrons to ``decohere'' and drop out of the
quantum-coherent 
transport process. We approach this problem from the perspective of 
nonlinear dynamics and utilize a unique experimental technique
that directly 
simulates the quantum scattering properties of complicated
(ray-chaotic) 
systems. A microwave cavity is used to simulate solutions to the 
time-independent Schr\"{o}dinger equation for a two-dimensional
ray-chaotic 
infinite square-well potential. The classically chaotic ray
trajectories 
within a suitably shaped microwave cavity play a role analogous
to that of 
the chaotic dynamics of noninteracting electron transport through a 
ballistic quantum dot in the absence of thermal fluctuations. In
wave 
chaotic scattering, statistical fluctuations of the scattering
matrix $S$ and 
the impedance (`reaction') matrix $Z$ depend both on universal
properties and 
on nonuniversal details of how the scatterer is coupled to external 
channels. We remove the non-universal effects of the coupling
from the 
experimental $S $data using the radiation impedance obtained
directly from the 
experiments, thus eliminating one of the most significant
complications in 
conventional transport measurements. The Landauer-B\"{u}ttiker
formalism is 
applied to obtain the conductance of a corresponding mesoscopic
quantum-dot 
device. We find good agreement for the probability density
functions of the 
experimentally derived surrogate conductance, as well as its mean
and 
variance, with the theoretical predictions based on random matrix
theory 
[1]. We also observe a linear relation between the quantum dephasing 
parameter and the cavity ohmic loss parameter. The results apply to 
scattering measurements on any wave chaotic system. We also
discuss future 
directions for this work.
\newline
\underline {[1]} S. Hemmady, \textit{et
al.},(http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.74.195326) Phys. Rev. B
74, 195326 (2006).
*This work is done in collaboration with Thomas Antonsen, James Hart, Sameer Hemmady, Edward Ott, and Xing Zheng, and is supported by the AFOSR MURI and DURIP programs.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2007.MAR.U3.3