English

Charge Fractionalization in nonchiral Luttinger systems

Strongly Correlated Electrons 2025-12-31 v2 Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics

Abstract

One-dimensional metals, such as quantum wires or carbon nanotubes, can carry charge in arbitrary units, smaller or larger than a single electron charge. However, according to Luttinger theory, which describes the low-energy excitations of such systems, when a single electron is injected by tunneling into the middle of such a wire, it will tend to break up into separate charge pulses, moving in opposite directions, which carry definite fractions ff and (1f)(1-f) of the electron charge, determined by a parameter gg that measures the strength of charge interactions in the wire. (The injected electron will also produce a spin excitation, which will travel at a different velocity than the charge excitations.) Observing charge fractionalization physics in an experiment is a challenge in those (nonchiral) low-dimensional systems which are adiabatically coupled to Fermi liquid leads. We theoretically discuss a first important step towards the observation of charge fractionalization in quantum wires based on momentum-resolved tunneling and multi-terminal geometries, and explain the recent experimental results of H. Steinberg {\it et al.}, Nature Physics {\bf 4}, 116 (2008).

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0803.0744,
  title  = {Charge Fractionalization in nonchiral Luttinger systems},
  author = {Karyn Le Hur and Bertrand I. Halperin and Amir Yacoby},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0803.0744},
  year   = {2025}
}

Comments

31 pages, final version to appear in Annals of Physics

R2 v1 2026-06-21T10:18:46.792Z