At a planar interface between two different semiconductors, electrons can form a two-dimensional electron gas. When placed in a magnetic field and illuminated with microwaves, such a 2DEG can show oscillations in its resistance as the magnetic field is varied. In some cases, the oscillations get so large that the resistance minima reach zero; for still larger oscillations, though, the resistance does not go negative but instead stays at zero over an extended region (see Physics Today, April 2003, page 24). Of the many theories that have been proposed to explain the zero-resistance state, new experiments support the most popular: Microwaves do induce negative resistance, but because a negative-resistance state is unstable, the current flow breaks up into different domains in such a way that the total voltage across the sample vanishes. In the new work, the researchers simultaneously illuminate the 2DEG with microwaves at two different frequencies...
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1 August 2006
August 01 2006
Citation
Phillip F. Schewe; A hint of negative electrical resistance. Physics Today 1 August 2006; 59 (8): 20. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4797419
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