English

Noisy Kondo impurities

Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics 2015-05-20 v1 Strongly Correlated Electrons

Abstract

The anti-ferromagnetic coupling of a magnetic impurity carrying a spin with the conduction electrons spins of a host metal is the basic mechanism responsible for the increase of the resistance of an alloy such as Cu0.998{}_{0.998}Fe0.002{}_{0.002} at low temperature, as originally suggested by Kondo . This coupling has emerged as a very generic property of localized electronic states coupled to a continuum . The possibility to design artificial controllable magnetic impurities in nanoscopic conductors has opened a path to study this many body phenomenon in unusual situations as compared to the initial one and, in particular, in out of equilibrium situations. So far, measurements have focused on the average current. Here, we report on \textit{current fluctuations} (noise) measurements in artificial Kondo impurities made in carbon nanotube devices. We find a striking enhancement of the current noise within the Kondo resonance, in contradiction with simple non-interacting theories. Our findings provide a test bench for one of the most important many-body theories of condensed matter in out of equilibrium situations and shed light on the noise properties of highly conductive molecular devices.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1010.4815,
  title  = {Noisy Kondo impurities},
  author = {T. Delattre and C. Feuillet-Palma and L. G. Herrmann and P. Morfin and J. -M. Berroir and G. Fève and B. Plaçais and D. C. Glattli and M. -S. Choi and C. Mora and T. Kontos},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1010.4815},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

minor differences with published version

R2 v1 2026-06-21T16:33:01.867Z