English

Stokes Paradox, Back Reflections and Interaction-Enhanced Conduction

Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics 2017-01-03 v2

Abstract

Interactions in electron systems can lead to viscous flows in which correlations allow electrons to avoid disorder scattering, reducing momentum loss and dissipation. We illustrate this behavior in a viscous pinball model, describing electrons moving in the presence of dilute point-like defects. Conductivity is found to obey an additive relation σ=σ0+Δσ\sigma=\sigma_0+\Delta\sigma, with a non-interacting Drude contribution σ0\sigma_0 and a contribution Δσ>0\Delta\sigma>0 describing conductivity enhancement due to interactions. The quantity Δσ\Delta\sigma is enhanced by a logarithmically large factor originating from the Stokes paradox at the hydrodynamic lengthscales and, in addition, from an effect of repeated returns to the same scatterer due to backreflection in the carrier-carrier collisions occurring at the ballistic lengthscales. The interplay between these effects is essential at the ballistic-to-viscous crossover.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1612.09239,
  title  = {Stokes Paradox, Back Reflections and Interaction-Enhanced Conduction},
  author = {Haoyu Guo and Ekin Ilseven and Gregory Falkovich and Leonid Levitov},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1612.09239},
  year   = {2017}
}

Comments

7 pgs, 1 fg. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1607.07269

R2 v1 2026-06-22T17:37:05.606Z