Search for Composite Fermions at Filling Factor 5/2: Role of Landau Level and Subband Index

Abstract

The pairing of composite fermions (CFs), electron-flux quasi-particles, is commonly proposed to explain the even-denominator fractional quantum Hall state observed at =5/2 in the first excited (N=1) Landau level (LL) of a two-dimensional electron system (2DES). While well-established to exist in the lowest (N=0) LL, much is unknown about CFs in the N=1 LL. Here we carry out geometric resonance measurements to detect CFs at =5/2 by subjecting the 2DES to a one-dimensional density modulation. Our data, taken at a temperature of 0.3 K, reveal no geometric resonances for CFs in the N=1 LL. In stark contrast, we observe clear signatures of such resonances when =5/2 is placed in the N=0 LL of the anti-symmetric subband by varying the 2DES width. This finding implies that the CFs' mean-free-path is significantly smaller in the N=1 LL compared to the N=0 LL. Our additional data as a function of in-plane magnetic field highlight the role of subband index and establish that CFs at =5/2 in the N=0 LL are more anisotropic in the symmetric subband than in the anti-symmetric subband.

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