The quantum Hall effect, the quantum cousin of the classical Hall effect, is observed in ultra-clean, two-dimensional electron gasses, at low temperatures (about 1 K or less) and high magnetic fields (on the order of Teslas). Under these conditions, the electrons form so-called quantum liquids with peculiar properties. The longitudinal resistance vanishes, while the off-diagonal (Hall) conductance is (extremely well) quantized, and takes the values σH = ν e2/h, where e2/h is the fundamental unit of conductance, and ν the filling fraction, which is an integer, or a simple fraction, such as 1/3, 1/5, 2/5, etc.
The (fractional) quantum Hall effect has become a large field of research. Here are some of the topics studied by Nordita members.
This page was printed on 2012-05-21 from vetenskapenshus.scfab.se/science/research/cm/qh
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11 Feb 2012