In a strong magnetic field and at extremely low temperatures, a two-dimensional sheet of electrons can transition into a strongly correlated state: the fractional quantum Hall (FQH) state. The one-dimensional edge of such a sheet is by itself a viable experimental platform for controlled studies of a wide range of quantum phenomena. In particular, recent experimental developments have enabled detailed thermal transport experiments for probing the properties of such FQH edges. Despite this progress, many pressing questions on edge energy propagation, equilibration, and redistribution have remained unanswered.
The purpose of the TEAPOT project was to theoretically address these and related questions by introducing new observables - heat noise, mixed noise, and delta-T noise for FQH edges. The main goal was to use these promising quantities as novel and complementary tools for probing emergent transport phenomena, not directly or not uniquely related to the electrical charge. To this end, TEAPOT sought to provide theoretical descriptions of the interrelated edge propagation of charge noise, heat noise, delta-T noise, and mixed noise. As a result, TEAPOT has opened up for novel types of FQH experiments, which have improved the fundamental understanding of strongly correlated quantum behaviour on the nanoscale. While primarily of fundamental interest, the acquired knowledge about strongly correlated quantum phenomena paves the way for developing future quantum technologies, e.g. small-scale thermodynamical or quantum computational applications.
TEAPOT concluded that complementary thermal probes, such as delta-T noise, heat noise, and thermal conductance, indeed provide several advantages over the conventionally used charge-based shot noise for probing fractional quantum Hall edge states as well as related, strongly correlated quantum systems.