Observation of a hierarchy of modes in an interacting one-dimensional system

ORAL

Abstract

Studying interacting fermions in 1D at high energy, we find a hierarchy in the spectral weights of the excitations theoretically and we observe evidence for second-level excitations experimentally. Diagonalising a model of fermions (without spin), we show that levels of the hierarchy are separated by powers of $\mathcal{R}^{2}/L^{2}$, where $\mathcal{R}$ is a length-scale related to interactions and $L$ is the system length. The first-level (strongest) excitations form a mode with parabolic dispersion, like that of a renormalised single particle. The second-level excitations produce a singular power-law line shape to the first-level mode and multiple power-laws at the spectral edge. We measure momentum-resolved tunneling of electrons (fermions with spin) from/to a wire formed within a GaAs heterostructure, which shows parabolic dispersion of the first-level mode and well-resolved spin-charge separation at low energy with appreciable interaction strength. We find structure resembling the second-level excitations, which dies away quite rapidly at high momentum.

Authors

  • Christopher Ford

    University of Cambridge

  • Maria Moreno

    University of Cambridge

  • Yiqing Jin

    University of Cambridge

  • Wooi Kiat Tan

    University of Cambridge

  • Griffiths Jonathan

    University of Cambridge, Cavendish Laboratory, University of Cambridge

  • Ian Farrer

    University of Cambridge

  • Geraint Jones

    University of Cambridge, Cavendish Laboratory, University of Cambridge

  • Anne Anthore

    Universite Paris Diderot

  • David Ritchie

    University of Cambridge, Cavendish Laboratory, University of Cambridge

  • Oleksandr Tsyplyatyev

    University of Birmingham

  • Andrew Schofield

    University of Birmingham