Density modulation and electrostatic self-consistency in a two-dimensional electron gas subject to a periodic quantizing magnetic field
Ulrich J. Gossmann, Andrei Manolescu, and Rolf R. Gerhardts (MPI-FKF,, Stuttgart)

TL;DR
This paper investigates how a periodic magnetic field affects the electron density and energy spectrum of a two-dimensional electron gas, considering electrostatic interactions and temperature effects, revealing conditions where the spectrum is significantly altered.
Contribution
It introduces a self-consistent Hartree approach to analyze density modulation and spectrum changes in a 2DEG under a periodic magnetic field, highlighting the role of temperature and length scales.
Findings
Spectrum remains similar to noninteracting case when $R_c \,\sim\, a_{\delta\rho}$.
Hartree potential can drastically modify the spectrum for $R_c \,\ll\, a_{\delta\rho}$.
Energy dispersion varies with filling factors, being reduced or amplified depending on conditions.
Abstract
We calculate the single-particle states of a two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) in a perpendicular quantizing magnetic field, which is periodic in one direction of the electron layer. We discuss the modulation of the electron density in this system and compare it with that of a 2DEG in a periodic electrostatic potential. We take account of the induced potential within the Hartree approximation, and calculate self-consistently the density fluctuations and effective energy bands. The electrostatic effects on the spectrum depend strongly on the temperature and on the ratio between the cyclotron radius and the length scale of the density variations. We find that can be equal to the modulation period , but also much smaller. For the spectrum in the vicinity of the chemical potential remains essentially the same as in the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
