Abstract

In high-mobility materials, conduction electrons can form a viscous fluid at low temperatures. We demonstrate that in a high-frequency flow of a two-dimensional electron fluid in a magnetic field the two types of excitations can coexist: those of the shear stress (previously unknown transverse magnetosound) and those associated with the charge density (conventional magnetoplasmons). The dispersion law and the damping coefficient of transverse magnetosound originate from the time dispersion of the viscosity of the fluid. Both the viscoelastic and the plasmonic components of the flow exhibit the recently proposed viscoelastic resonance that is related to the own dynamics of shear stress of charged fluids in a magnetic field. We argue that the generation of transverse magnetosound, manifesting itself by the viscoelastic resonance, is apparently responsible for the peak in photoresistance and peculiarities in photovoltage observed in ultrahigh-mobility GaAs quantum wells.

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