Applications of Ideas from Random Matrix Theory to Step Distributions on "Misoriented" Surfaces
read the original abstract
Arising as a fluctuation phenomenon, the equilibrium distribution of meandering steps with mean separation $<\ell>$ on a "tilted" surface can be fruitfully analyzed using results from RMT. The set of step configurations in 2D can be mapped onto the world lines of spinless fermions in 1+1D using the Calogero-Sutherland model. The strength of the ("instantaneous", inverse-square) elastic repulsion between steps, in dimensionless form, is $\beta(\beta-2)/4$. The distribution of spacings $s< \ell>$ between neighboring steps (analogous to the normalized spacings of energy levels) is well described by a {\it "generalized" Wigner surmise}: $p_{\beta}(0,s) \approx a s^{\beta}\exp(-b s^2)$. The value of $\beta$ is taken to best fit the data; typically $2 \le \beta \le 10$. The procedure is superior to conventional Gaussian and mean-field approaches, and progress is being made on formal justification. Furthermore, the theoretically simpler step-step distribution function can be measured and analyzed based on exact results. Formal results and applications to experiments on metals and semiconductors are summarized, along with open questions. (conference abstract)
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.