Tunneling between the Edges of Two Lateral Quantum Hall Systems
W. Kang, H.L. Stormer, K.W. Baldwin, L.N. Pfeiffer, and K.W. West

TL;DR
This paper investigates tunneling between the edges of two quantum Hall systems, revealing new energy gaps and electron dispersion relations, challenging weak interaction models of edge states.
Contribution
It provides experimental insights into edge state interactions in quantum Hall systems, highlighting the formation of energy gaps and novel dispersion relations.
Findings
Observation of new energy gaps in edge state tunneling
Persistence of zero-bias conductance peak
Inconsistency with weakly interacting edge state models
Abstract
The edge of a two-dimensional electron system (2DES) in a magnetic field consists of one-dimensional (1D) edge-channels that arise from the confining electric field at the edge of the specimen. The crossed electric and magnetic fields, E x B, cause electrons to drift parallel to the sample boundary creating a chiral current that travels along the edge in only one direction. Remarkably, in an ideal 2DES in the quantum Hall regime all current flows along the edge. Quantization of the Hall resistance, , arises from occupation of N 1D edge channels, each contributing a conductance of . To explore this unusual one-dimensional property of an otherwise two-dimensional system, we have studied tunneling between the edges of 2DESs in the regime of integer quantum Hall effect (QHE). In the presence of an atomically precise, high-quality tunnel…
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