We consider statistics of electronic transport in chaotic cavities where time-reversal symmetry is broken and one of the leads is weakly nonideal; that is, it contains tunnel barriers characterized by tunneling probabilities Γ(i). Using symmetric function expansions and a generalized Selberg integral, we develop a systematic perturbation theory in 1-Γ(i) valid for an arbitrary number of channels and obtain explicit formulas up to second order for the average and variance of the conductance and for the average shot noise. Higher moments of the conductance are considered to leading order.
Pseudochaotic properties are systematically investigated in a one-parameter family of irrational triangular billiards (all angles irrational with π). The absolute value of the position correlation function C(x)(t) decays like ~t(-α). Fast (α≈1) and slow (0<α<1) decays are observed, thus indicating that the irrational triangles do not share a unique ergodic dynamics, which, instead, may vary smoothly between the opposite limits of strong mixing (α=1) and regular behaviors (α=0). Upgrading previous data, spectral statistical properties of the quantized counterparts are computed from 150000 energy eigenvalues numerically calculated for each billiard. Gaussian orthogonal ensemble spectral fluctuations are observed when α≈1 and intermediate statistics are found otherwise. Our irrational billiards have zero Kolmogorov-Sinai entropy and essentially infinity genus. Thus, differently from previous works on rational (pseudointegrable) enclosures, our results provide a missing classical-quantum correspondence regarding the ergodic hierarchy for a set of nonchaotic systems that might enjoy the strong mixing property.
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