Remote Mesoscopic Signatures of Induced Magnetic Texture in Graphene

dc.contributor.authorN. Arabchigavkani
dc.contributor.authorR. Somphonsane
dc.contributor.authorH. Ramamoorthy
dc.contributor.authorG. He
dc.contributor.authorJ. Nathawat
dc.contributor.authorS. Yin
dc.contributor.authorB. Barut
dc.contributor.authorK. He
dc.contributor.authorM._D. Randle
dc.contributor.authorR. Dixit
dc.contributor.authorK. Sakanashi
dc.contributor.authorN. Aoki
dc.contributor.authorK. Zhang
dc.contributor.authorL. Wang
dc.contributor.authorW.-N. Mei
dc.contributor.authorP._A. Dowben
dc.contributor.authorJ. Fransson
dc.contributor.authorJ._P. Bird
dc.date.accessioned2025-07-21T06:04:51Z
dc.date.issued2021-02-25
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 work, 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/123456789/10141
dc.subjectMesoscopic physics
dc.subjectWeak localization
dc.subjectTexture (cosmology)
dc.subject.classificationGraphene research and applications
dc.titleRemote Mesoscopic Signatures of Induced Magnetic Texture in Graphene
dc.typeArticle

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