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Nonequilibrium relaxation and odd-even effect in finite-temperature electron gases

ORAL

Abstract

Pauli blocking in Fermi liquids imposes strong phase-space constraints on quasiparticle lifetimes, leading to a well-known quadratic-in-temperature decay rate of quasiparticle modes at low temperatures. In two-dimensional systems, however, even longer-lived modes are predicted (dubbed "odd-parity" modes). I will present results for the full spectrum of relaxational eigenmodes of a Fermi liquid within kinetic theory, focussing on the experimentally relevant case of a Fermi liquid with screened Coulomb interactions, and map out the decay rates of quasiparticle modes beyond the asymptotic low temperature limit up to the Fermi temperature, which covers the temperature range of typical experiments. These calculations confirm the existence of anomalously long-lived odd-parity modes and provide a comprehensive classification and detailed analysis of the relaxation spectrum. In particular, we find that (i) the odd-parity effect in the decay rates extends to temperatures as large as T=0.1TF; (ii) there is only a small number of long-lived odd-parity modes, with an infinite number of remaining modes that show standard Fermi-liquid scaling; (iii) the ratio between the odd- and even-parity lifetimes is tunable with the Coulomb interaction strength, not just temperature, which reflects a difference in the microscopic relaxation mechanism of the modes. Our findings provide a comprehensive description of the nonequilibrium relaxation behavior of two-dimensional electron gases and bridge a significant gap in our understanding of these systems.

Publication: arXiv:2405.03635

Presenters

  • Johannes Hofmann

    University of Gothenburg

Authors

  • Johannes Hofmann

    University of Gothenburg

  • Eric Nilsson

    Chalmers University of Technology

  • Ulf Gran

    Chalmers University of Technology