Surface acoustic wave attenuation by a two-dimensional electron gas in a strong magnetic field
Andreas Knaebchen (1), Yehoshua Levinson (1), Ora Entin-Wohlman (2), ((1) Weizmann Institute of Science, Department of Condensed Matter Physics;, (2) School of Physics, Astronomy, Tel Aviv University)

TL;DR
This paper investigates how surface acoustic waves are attenuated by a two-dimensional electron gas in a strong magnetic field, considering the effects of a random potential and electron-phonon interactions, revealing a double-peak absorption structure.
Contribution
It introduces a quasiclassical model incorporating percolation theory and derives the dielectric function for screening, providing new insights into SAW attenuation in quantum Hall regimes.
Findings
Attenuation coefficient shows a double-peak structure near filling factor 1/2.
Attenuation is independent of temperature in the specified high-frequency regime.
The width of strong absorption region follows a specific scaling law.
Abstract
The propagation of a surface acoustic wave (SAW) on GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructures is studied in the case where the two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) is subject to a strong magnetic field and a smooth random potential with correlation length Lambda and amplitude Delta. The electron wave functions are described in a quasiclassical picture using results of percolation theory for two-dimensional systems. In accordance with the experimental situation, Lambda is assumed to be much smaller than the sound wavelength 2*pi/q. This restricts the absorption of surface phonons at a filling factor \bar{\nu} approx 1/2 to electrons occupying extended trajectories of fractal structure. Both piezoelectric and deformation potential interactions of surface acoustic phonons with electrons are considered and the corresponding interaction vertices are derived. These vertices are found to differ from those…
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