Tunneling of two particles in synchronous and asynchronous regimes is studied
in the framework of dissipative quantum tunneling. The critical temperature T_c
corresponding to a bifurcation of the underbarrier trajectory is determined.
The effect of a heat bath local mode on the probability of two-dimensional
tunneling transfer is also investigated. At certain values of the parameters,
the degeneracy of antiparallel tunneling trajectories is important. Thus, four,
six, twelve, etc., pairs of the trajectories should be taken into account (a
cascade of bifurcations). For the parallel particle tunneling the bifurcation
resembles phase transition of a first kind, while for the antiparallel transfer
it behaves as second order phase transition. The proposed theory allows for the
explanation of experimental data on quantum fluctuations in two-proton
tunneling in porphyrins near the critical temperature.Comment: RevTeX4, twocolumn, 12 pages, 11 figures (17 eps-files). Revised
version, to appear in Phys. Rev.
We observe a series of sharp resonant features in the tunnelling differential conductance of InAs quantum dots. We found that dissipative quantum tunnelling has a strong influence on the operation of nano-devices. Because of such tunnelling the current-voltage characteristics of tunnel contact created between atomic force microscope tip and a surface of InAs/GaAs quantum dots display many interesting peaks. We found that the number, position, and heights of these peaks are associated with the phonon modes involved. To describe the found effect we use a quasi-classical approximation. There the tunnelling current is related to a creation of a dilute instanton-anti-instanton gas. Our experimental data are well described with exactly solvable model where one charged particle is weakly interacting with two promoting phonon modes associated with external medium. We conclude that the characteristics of the tunnel nanoelectronic devices can thus be controlled by a proper choice of phonons existing in materials, which are involved.
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