We find that the long-wavelength magnetoplasmon, resistively detected by photoconductivity spectroscopy in high-mobility two-dimensional electron systems, deviates from its well-known semiclassical nature as uncovered in conventional absorption experiments. A clear filling-factor dependent plateau-type dispersion is observed that reveals a so far unknown relation between the magnetoplasmon and the quantum Hall effect.
We investigate the impact of microwave excited spin excitations on the dc charge transport in a ferromagnetic (FM) grating. We observe both resonant and nonresonant microwave photoresistance, which are caused, respectively, by spin and charge dissipations of the microwave power into the FM. A macroscopic model based on Maxwell and Landau-Lifschitz equations reveals the mixing of spin and charge dissipations, which shows that the ferromagnetic anti-resonance is shifted when the conductivity is anisotropic. We find that the microwave photoconductivity provides a powerful new tool to study the interplay between photonic, spintronic, and charge effects in FM microstructures.
Cyclotron resonance (CR) and magnetotransport experiments have been performed on modulation Si-doped AlxGa1−xN/GaN heterostructures with aluminum fraction x varying from 0.15 to 0.30. A clear CR absorption and Shubnikov–de Haas oscillations have been observed. The CR line shapes are analyzed by calculating the high frequency conductivity of a two-dimensional electron gas. The obtained electron effective mass m* and scattering time τ are found to depend on the aluminum fraction x. For x=0.30 the measured CR frequency shifts significantly upward, which demonstrates the formation of potential fluctuations in AlxGa1−xN/GaN heterostructures with large aluminum fraction x.
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