Abstract

We investigate a one-component, quasi-zero dimensional, quantum plasma exposed to a parabolic potential and an applied magnetic field in the symmetric gauge. If the size of such a system as can be realized in the semiconducting quantum dots is on the order of the de-Broglie wavelength, the electronic and optical properties become highly tunable. Then the quantum size effects challenge the observation of many-particle phenomena such as the magneto-optical absorption, Raman intensity, and electron energy-loss spectrum. An exact analytical solution of the problem leads us to infer that these many-particle phenomena are, in fact, dictated by the generalized Kohn’s theorem (GKT) in the long-wavelength limit. Maneuvering the confinement and/or the magnetic field furnishes the resonance energies capable of being explored with the FIR, Raman, and/or electron-energy-loss spectroscopy. This implies that either of these probes is competent in observing the localized magnetoplasmons in the system. As an application of the rigorous analytical diagnosis of the system, we have presented various pertinent single-particle, such as Fock-Darwin spectrum, Fermi energy, zigzag excitation spectrum, and magneto-optical transitions, and the many-particle phenomena, such as magneto-optical absorption, Raman intensity, and electron energy-loss probability. In the latter, the energy position of the resonance peaks is observed to be independent of the electron-electron interactions and hence of the number of electrons in the quantum dot in compliance with the GKT. It is found that both confinement potential and magnetic field play a decisive role in influencing the aforementioned many-particle phenomena. Specifically, increasing (decreasing) the strength of the confining potential is found to be analogous to shrinking (expanding) the size of the quantum dots and results into a blue (red) shift in the respective spectra. Intensifying the magnetic field has two-fold effects in the resonance spectra associated with all three spectroscopies considered here: the lower resonance peak observes a red shift, whereas the higher one experiences a blue shift. This is a unique and intriguing behavior observed in the quantum dots with complete confinement. A deeper insight into the physics of the quantum dots is paving the way for their implementation in such diverse fields as quantum computing and medical imaging.

Highlights

  • The quest for diminishing dimensions had reached the end of the quantum rainbow when researchers succeeded in fabricating quantum dots – the ultimate in confinement – at a point in the early 1990s

  • This section is devoted to the development of the theory of inelastic electron scattering (IES) – a branch of physics becoming popularly known as the electron energy-loss spectroscopy (EELS) – for the Q-0DES completely confined by a harmonic potential and subjected to an applied magnetic field in the symmetric gauge

  • It is observed that the resonance frequencies in the magneto-optical absorption, Raman intensity, and energy-loss probability are the same as the bare resonance frequencies in compliance with the generalized Kohn’s theorem (GKT) in harmonically confined quantum dots in the long wavelength limit (LWL)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The quest for diminishing dimensions had reached the end of the quantum rainbow when researchers succeeded in fabricating quantum dots – the ultimate in confinement – at a point in the early 1990s. The existence of the boundary – limiting the extent of the quantum dot – mimics the defects which in turn lead to the creation of the surface states lying within the forbidden gap of the host solid These states trap the charge carriers and degrade the electronic, optical, and transport properties of the system. A solid state (degenerate) plasma – existing in the metals and doped semiconductors – is a collection of charged particles such as electrons and holes and is characterized by a collective mode associated with the self-sustaining, in-phase, charge-density oscillations due to the restoring force arising from the long-range Coulomb potential By their very nature, these elementary modes of excitations are further categorized depending upon the wavelength of the probe employed to study plasma.

Eigenfunction and eigenenergy
Density-density correlation function
Inverse dielectric function
Magneto-optical absorption
Inelastic light scattering
Inelastic electron scattering
Radial Configuration
Polar Configuration
Magneto-optical transitions – selection rules
The Fermi energy
ILLUSTRATIVE EXAMPLES
Single-particle phenomena
Many-particle phenomena
Raman Scattering
CONCLUDING REMARKS
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