Non-equilibrium quantum transport through a dissipative resonant level
Chung-Hou Chung, Karyn Le Hur, Gleb Finkelstein, Matthias Vojta, and, Peter Woelfle

TL;DR
This paper analyzes non-equilibrium quantum transport near a quantum phase transition in a dissipative resonant-level model, revealing how bias voltage influences conductance and noise, with implications for quantum dot experiments.
Contribution
It provides a detailed mapping to an effective Kondo model and applies a renormalization group approach to understand non-equilibrium transport near a KT transition.
Findings
Conductance scales with temperature and bias voltage near the transition.
Finite-frequency noise reveals signatures of the quantum phase transition.
The analysis extends to systems coupled to chiral Luttinger-liquid leads.
Abstract
The resonant-level model represents a paradigmatic quantum system which serves as a basis for many other quantum impurity models. We provide a comprehensive analysis of the non-equilibrium transport near a quantum phase transition in a spinless dissipative resonant-level model, extending earlier work [Phys. Rev. Lett. 102, 216803 (2009)]. A detailed derivation of a rigorous mapping of our system onto an effective Kondo model is presented. A controlled energy-dependent renormalization group approach is applied to compute the non-equilibrium current in the presence of a finite bias voltage V. In the linear response regime V ->0, the system exhibits as a function of the dissipative strength a localized-delocalized quantum transition of the Kosterlitz-Thouless (KT) type. We address fundamental issues of the non-equilibrium transport near the quantum phase transition: Does the bias voltage…
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