Revanth Kodoru, Atanu Saha, et al.
arXiv
We study high-mobility, interacting GaAs bilayer hole systems exhibiting counterflow superfluid transport at total filling-factor ν=1. As the density of the two layers is reduced, making the bilayer more interacting, the counterflow Hall resistivity (ρxy) decreases at a given temperature, while the counterflow longitudinal resistivity (ρxx), which is much larger than ρxy, hardly depends on density. On the other hand, a small imbalance in the layer densities can result in significant changes in ρxx at ν=1, while ρxy remains vanishingly small. Our data suggest that the finite ρxx at ν=1 is a result of mobile vortices in the superfluid created by the ubiquitous disorder in this system. © 2005 The American Physical Society.
Revanth Kodoru, Atanu Saha, et al.
arXiv
U. Wieser, U. Kunze, et al.
Physica E: Low-Dimensional Systems and Nanostructures
L.K. Wang, A. Acovic, et al.
MRS Spring Meeting 1993
J.R. Thompson, Yang Ren Sun, et al.
Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications