D. Reuter
University of Paderborn
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Publication
Featured researches published by D. Reuter.
Physical Review Letters | 2005
R. Scheibner; H. Buhmann; D. Reuter; M. N. Kiselev; L. W. Molenkamp
The thermopower of a Kondo-correlated gate-defined quantum dot is studied using a current heating technique. In the presence of spin correlations, the thermopower shows a clear deviation from the semiclassical Mott relation between thermopower and conductivity. The strong thermopower signal indicates a significant asymmetry in the spectral density of states of the Kondo resonance with respect to the Fermi energies of the reservoirs. The observed behavior can be explained within the framework of an Anderson-impurity model.
New Journal of Physics | 2008
R. Scheibner; M. König; D. Reuter; Andreas D. Wieck; C Gould; H. Buhmann; L. W. Molenkamp
We report the observation of thermal rectification in a semiconductor quantum dot, as inferred from the asymmetric line shape of the thermopower oscillations. The asymmetry is observed at high in-plane magnetic fields and caused by the presence of a high orbital momentum state in the dot.
Nature Physics | 2013
Andreas V. Kuhlmann; Julien Houel; Arne Ludwig; Lukas Greuter; D. Reuter; Andreas D. Wieck; M. Poggio; R. J. Warburton
Charge noise and spin noise lead to decoherence of the state of a quantum dot. A fast spectroscopic technique based on resonance fluorescence can distinguish between these two deleterious effects, enabling a better understanding of how to minimize their influence.
Science | 2007
A. Greilich; A. Shabaev; D. R. Yakovlev; Al. L. Efros; I. A. Yugova; D. Reuter; Andreas D. Wieck; M. Bayer
The hyperfine interaction of an electron with the nuclei is considered as the primary obstacle to coherent control of the electron spin in semiconductor quantum dots. We show, however, that the nuclei in singly charged quantum dots act constructively by focusing the electron spin precession about a magnetic field into well-defined modes synchronized with a laser pulse protocol. In a dot with a synchronized electron, the light-stimulated fluctuations of the hyperfine nuclear field acting on the electron are suppressed. The information about electron spin precession is imprinted in the nuclei and thereby can be stored for tens of minutes in darkness. The frequency focusing drives an electron spin ensemble into dephasing-free subspaces with the potential to realize single frequency precession of the entire ensemble.
Physical Review Letters | 2006
A. Greilich; Ruth Oulton; E. A. Zhukov; I. A. Yugova; D. R. Yakovlev; M. Bayer; A. Shabaev; Al. L. Efros; I. A. Merkulov; V. Stavarache; D. Reuter; Andreas D. Wieck
Electron spin coherence has been generated optically in n-type modulation doped (In,Ga)As/GaAs quantum dots (QDs) which contain on average a single electron per dot. The coherence arises from resonant excitation of the QDs by circularly polarized laser pulses, creating a coherent superposition of an electron and a trion. Time dependent Faraday rotation is used to probe the spin precession of the optically oriented electrons about a transverse magnetic field. The coherence generation can be controlled by pulse intensity, being most efficient for (2n+1)pi pulses.
Physical Review B | 2007
I. A. Yugova; A. Greilich; D. R. Yakovlev; Andrey A. Kiselev; M. Bayer; V. V. Petrov; Yu. K. Dolgikh; D. Reuter; Andreas D. Wieck
The Zeeman splitting and the underlying
Nature Communications | 2015
Andreas V. Kuhlmann; Jonathan H. Prechtel; Julien Houel; Arne Ludwig; D. Reuter; Andreas D. Wieck; R. J. Warburton
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Applied Physics Letters | 2005
Nils C. Gerhardt; S. Hövel; Carsten Brenner; Martin R. Hofmann; Fang Yuh Lo; D. Reuter; Andreas D. Wieck; E. Schuster; W. Keune; K. Westerholt
factor for conduction-band electrons in
Physical Review Letters | 2012
Julien Houel; Andreas V. Kuhlmann; Lukas Greuter; Fei Xue; M. Poggio; Brian D. Gerardot; Paul A. Dalgarno; Antonio Badolato; P. M. Petroff; A. Ludwig; D. Reuter; Andreas D. Wieck; R. J. Warburton
\mathrm{Ga}\mathrm{As}∕{\mathrm{Al}}_{x}{\mathrm{Ga}}_{1\ensuremath{-}x}\mathrm{As}
Applied Physics Letters | 2008
S. Hövel; Nils C. Gerhardt; Martin R. Hofmann; Fang Yuh Lo; D. Reuter; Andreas D. Wieck; E. Schuster; W. Keune; H. Wende; O. Petracic; K. Westerholt
quantum wells have been measured by spin-beat spectroscopy based on a time-resolved Kerr rotation technique. The experimental data are plotted as functions of the lowest band-to-band optical transition energy, i.e., the effective band gap of the quantum wells. The model calculations suggest that in the tracked range of transition energies