3 research outputs found
Source Data.xlsx
The source data includes many topographies obtained in scanning tunneling microscope.</p
Twisted van der Waals Josephson Junction Based on a High‑<i>T</i><sub>c</sub> Superconductor
Stacking
two-dimensional van der Waals (vdW) materials rotated
with respect to each other show versatility for studying exotic quantum
phenomena. In particular, anisotropic layered materials have great
potential for such twistronics applications, providing high tunability.
Here, we report anisotropic superconducting order parameters in twisted
Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+x (Bi-2212) vdW junctions with an atomically clean vdW interface,
achieved using the microcleave-and-stack technique. The vdW junctions
with twist angles of 0° and 90° showed the maximum Josephson
coupling, comparable to that of intrinsic Josephson junctions. As
the twist angle approaches 45°, Josephson coupling is suppressed,
and eventually disappears at 45°. The observed twist angle dependence
of the Josephson coupling can be explained quantitatively by theoretical
calculation with the d-wave superconducting order
parameter of Bi-2212 and finite tunneling incoherence of the junction.
Our results revealed the anisotropic nature of Bi-2212 and provided
a novel fabrication technique for vdW-based twistronics platforms
compatible with air-sensitive vdW materials
Spontaneous emission decay and excitation in photonic temporal crystals
Over the last few decades, the prominent strategies for controlling spontaneous emission has been the use of resonant or space-periodic photonic structures. This approach, initially articulated by Purcell and later expanded upon by Yablonovitch in the context of photonic crystals, leverages the spatial surroundings to modify the spontaneous emission decay rate of atoms or quantum emitters. However, the rise of time-varying photonics has compelled a reevaluation of the spontaneous emission process within dynamically changing environments, especially concerning photonic temporal crystals where optical properties undergo time-periodic modulation. Here, we apply classical light-matter interaction theory along with Floquet analysis to reveal a substantial enhancement in the spontaneous emission decay rate at the momentum gap frequency in photonic temporal crystals. This enhancement is attributed to time-periodicity-induced loss and gain mechanisms, as well as the non-orthogonality of Floquet eigenstates that are inherent to photonic temporal crystals. Intriguingly, our findings also suggest that photonic temporal crystals enable the spontaneous excitation of an atom from its ground state to an excited state, accompanied by the concurrent emission of a photon
