Remote Mesoscopic Signatures of Induced Magnetic Texture in Graphene

dc.contributor.authorNargess Arabchigavkani
dc.contributor.authorRatchanok Somphonsane
dc.contributor.authorHarihara Ramamoorthy
dc.contributor.authorGuanchen He
dc.contributor.authorJubin Nathawat
dc.contributor.authorShenchu Yin
dc.contributor.authorBilal Barut
dc.contributor.authorKang He
dc.contributor.authorMichael D. Randle
dc.contributor.authorRipudaman Dixit
dc.contributor.authorKohei Sakanashi
dc.contributor.authorNobuyuki Aoki
dc.contributor.authorK. Zhang
dc.contributor.authorLei Wang
dc.contributor.authorW. N. Mei
dc.contributor.authorP. A. Dowben
dc.contributor.authorJonas Fransson
dc.contributor.authorF. Bird
dc.date.accessioned2026-05-08T19:19:20Z
dc.date.issued2021-2-25
dc.description.abstractMesoscopic conductance fluctuations are a ubiquitous signature of phase-coherent transport in small conductors, exhibiting universal character independent of system details. In this Letter, however, we demonstrate a pronounced breakdown of this universality, due to the interplay of local and remote phenomena in transport. Our experiments are performed in a graphene-based interaction-detection geometry, in which an artificial magnetic texture is induced in the graphene layer by covering a portion of it with a micromagnet. When probing conduction at some distance from this region, the strong influence of remote factors is manifested through the appearance of giant conductance fluctuations, with amplitude much larger than e^{2}/h. This violation of one of the fundamental tenets of mesoscopic physics dramatically demonstrates how local considerations can be overwhelmed by remote signatures in phase-coherent conductors.
dc.identifier.doi10.1103/physrevlett.126.086802
dc.identifier.urihttps://dspace.kmitl.ac.th/handle/123456789/16979
dc.publisherPhysical Review Letters
dc.subjectGraphene research and applications
dc.subjectQuantum and electron transport phenomena
dc.subjectAdvanced Memory and Neural Computing
dc.titleRemote Mesoscopic Signatures of Induced Magnetic Texture in Graphene
dc.typeArticle

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