Effect of Magnetization on the Tunneling Anomaly in Compressible Quantum Hall States

Debanjan Chowdhury, Brian Skinner, and Patrick A. Lee
Phys. Rev. Lett. 120, 266601 – Published 29 June 2018
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Abstract

Tunneling of electrons into a two-dimensional electron system is known to exhibit an anomaly at low bias, in which the tunneling conductance vanishes due to a many-body interaction effect. Recent experiments have measured this anomaly between two copies of the half-filled Landau level as a function of in-plane magnetic field, and they suggest that increasing spin polarization drives a deeper suppression of tunneling. Here, we present a theory of the tunneling anomaly between two copies of the partially spin-polarized Halperin-Lee-Read state, and we show that the conventional description of the tunneling anomaly, based on the Coulomb self-energy of the injected charge packet, is inconsistent with the experimental observation. We propose that the experiment is operating in a different regime, not previously considered, in which the charge-spreading action is determined by the compressibility of the composite fermions.

  • Figure
  • Received 8 December 2017

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.120.266601

© 2018 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Condensed Matter, Materials & Applied Physics

Authors & Affiliations

Debanjan Chowdhury, Brian Skinner, and Patrick A. Lee

  • Department of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA

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Issue

Vol. 120, Iss. 26 — 29 June 2018

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