Fractionally Charged Zero-Energy Single-Particle Excitations in a Driven Fermi Sea

Phys Rev Lett. 2016 Jul 22;117(4):046801. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.117.046801. Epub 2016 Jul 18.

Abstract

A voltage pulse of a Lorentzian shape carrying half of the flux quantum excites out of a zero-temperature Fermi sea an electron in a mixed state, which looks like a quasiparticle with an effectively fractional charge e/2. A prominent feature of such an excitation is a narrow peak in the energy distribution function lying exactly at the Fermi energy μ. Another spectacular feature is that the distribution function has symmetric tails around μ, which results in a zero-energy excitation. This sounds improbable since at zero temperature all available states below μ are fully occupied. The resolution lies in the fact that such a voltage pulse also excites electron-hole pairs, which free some space below μ and thus allow a zero-energy quasiparticle to exist. I discuss also how to address separately electron-hole pairs and a fractionally charged zero-energy excitation in an experiment.