ABSTRACT

Continuing miniaturization of electronic devices, together with the quickly growing number of nanotechnological applications, demands a profound understanding of the underlying physics. Most of the fundamental problems of modern condensed matter physics involve various aspects of quantum transport and fluctuation phenomena at the nanoscale. In nanostructures, electrons are usually confined to a limited volume and interact with each other and lattice ions, simultaneously suffering multiple scattering events on impurities, barriers, surface imperfections, and other defects. Electron interaction with other degrees of freedom generally yields two major consequences, quantum dissipation and quantum decoherence. In other words, electrons can lose their energy and ability for quantum interference even at very low temperatures. These two different, but related, processes are at the heart of all quantum phenomena discussed in this book.

This book presents copious details to facilitate the understanding of the basic physics behind a result and the learning to technically reproduce the result without delving into extra literature. The book subtly balances the description of theoretical methods and techniques and the display of the rich landscape of the physical phenomena that can be accessed by these methods. It is useful for a broad readership ranging from master’s and PhD students to postdocs and senior researchers.

part |1 pages

Part A

chapter Chapter 3|25 pages

Quantum Particle in a Dissipative Environment

chapter Chapter 4|47 pages

Quantum Tunneling with Dissipation

chapter Chapter 5|21 pages

Macroscopic Quantum Coherence and Dissipation

chapter Chapter 7|60 pages

Coulomb Effects in Metallic Tunnel Junctions

part |578 pages

Part B

chapter Chapter 8|45 pages

Quantum Particle in a Diffusive Electron Gas

chapter Chapter 10|36 pages

Effective Action for Coherent Scatterers

chapter Chapter 11|35 pages

Coulomb Effects in Short Coherent Conductors

chapter Chapter 12|31 pages

Charging Effects in Metallic Quantum Dots

chapter Chapter 17|46 pages

Superconducting Contacts beyond the Tunneling Limit

chapter Chapter 18|28 pages

Effective Action and Superconducting Fluctuations

chapter Chapter 20|44 pages

Persistent Currents in Superconducting Nanorings