171 research outputs found
Reentrant topological phase transitions in a disordered spinless superconducting wire
In a one-dimensional spinless p-wave superconductor with coherence length \xi, disorder induces a phase transition between a topologically nontrivial phase and a trivial insulating phase at the critical mean free path l=\xi/2. Here, we show that a multichannel spinless p-wave superconductor goes through an alternation of topologically trivial and nontrivial phases upon increasing the disorder strength, the number of phase transitions being equal to the channel number N. The last phase transition, from a nontrivial phase into the trivial phase, takes place at a mean free path l = \xi/(N+1), parametrically smaller than the critical mean free path in one dimension. Our result is valid in the limit that the wire width W is much smaller than the superconducting coherence length \xi
Effects of electron scattering on the topological properties of nanowires: Majorana fermions from disorder and superlattices
We focus on inducing topological state from regular, or irregular scattering
in (i) p-wave superconducting wires and (ii) Rashba wires proximity coupled to
an s-wave superconductor. We find that contrary to common expectations the
topological properties of both systems are fundamentally different: In p-wave
wires, disorder generally has a detrimental effect on the topological order and
the topological state is destroyed beyond a critical disorder strength. In
contrast, in Rashba wires, which are relevant for recent experiments, disorder
can {\it induce} topological order, reducing the need for quasiballistic
samples to obtain Majorana fermions. Moreover, we find that the total phase
space area of the topological state is conserved for long disordered Rashba
wires, and can even be increased in an appropriately engineered superlattice
potential.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figs, RevTe
Mesoscopic Spin Hall Effect
We investigate the spin Hall effect in ballistic chaotic quantum dots with
spin-orbit coupling. We show that a longitudinal charge current can generate a
pure transverse spin current. While this transverse spin current is generically
nonzero for a fixed sample, we show that when the spin-orbit coupling time is
large compared to the mean dwell time inside the dot, it fluctuates universally
from sample to sample or upon variation of the chemical potential with a
vanishing average. For a fixed sample configuration, the transverse spin
current has a finite typical value ~e^2 V/h, proportional to the longitudinal
bias V on the sample, and corresponding to about one excess open channel for
one of the two spin species. Our analytical results are in agreement with
numerical results in a diffusive system [W. Ren et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 97,
066603 (2006)] and are further confirmed by numerical simulation in a chaotic
cavity.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Measurement of spin-dependent conductivities in a two-dimensional electron gas
Spin accumulation is generated by injecting an unpolarized charge current
into a channel of GaAs two-dimensional electron gas subject to an in-plane
magnetic field, then measured in a non-local geometry. Unlike previous
measurements that have used spin-polarized nanostructures, here the spin
accumulation arises simply from the difference in bulk conductivities for
spin-up and spin-down carriers. Comparison to a diffusive model that includes
spin subband splitting in magnetic field suggests a significantly enhanced
electron spin susceptibility in the 2D electron gas
Supersymmetry in the Majorana Cooper-Pair Box
Over the years, supersymmetric quantum mechanics has evolved from a toy model
of high energy physics to a field of its own. Although various examples of
supersymmetric quantum mechanics have been found, systems that have a natural
realization are scarce. Here, we show that the extension of the conventional
Cooper-pair box by a 4pi-periodic Majorana-Josephson coupling realizes
supersymmetry for certain values of the ratio between the conventional
Josephson and the Majorana- Josephson coupling strength. The supersymmetry we
find is a "hidden" minimally bosonized supersymmetry that provides a
non-trivial generalization of the supersymmetry of the free particle and relies
crucially on the presence of an anomalous Josephson junction in the system. We
show that the resulting degeneracy of the energy levels can be probed directly
in a tunneling experiment and discuss the various transport signatures. An
observation of the predicted level degeneracy would provide clear evidence for
the presence of the anomalous Josephson coupling.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Chirality blockade of Andreev reflection in a magnetic Weyl semimetal
A Weyl semimetal with broken time-reversal symmetry has a minimum of two
species of Weyl fermions, distinguished by their opposite chirality, in a pair
of Weyl cones at opposite momenta that are displaced in the direction
of the magnetization. Andreev reflection at the interface between a Weyl
semimetal in the normal state (N) and a superconductor (S) that pairs
must involve a switch of chirality, otherwise it is blocked. We show that this
"chirality blockade" suppresses the superconducting proximity effect when the
magnetization lies in the plane of the NS interface. A Zeeman field at the
interface can provide the necessary chirality switch and activate Andreev
reflection.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures. V2: added investigation of the dependence of the
chirality blockade on the direction of the magnetization and (Appendix C)
calculations of the Fermi-arc mediated Josephson effec
Quantal Andreev billiards: Semiclassical approach to mesoscale oscillations in the density of states
Andreev billiards are finite, arbitrarily-shaped, normal-state regions,
surrounded by superconductor. At energies below the superconducting gap,
single-quasiparticle excitations are confined to the normal region and its
vicinity, the essential mechanism for this confinement being Andreev
reflection. This Paper develops and implements a theoretical framework for the
investigation of the short-wave quantal properties of these
single-quasiparticle excitations. The focus is primarily on the relationship
between the quasiparticle energy eigenvalue spectrum and the geometrical shape
of the normal-state region, i.e., the question of spectral geometry in the
novel setting of excitations confined by a superconducting pair-potential.
Among the central results of this investigation are two semiclassical trace
formulas for the density of states. The first, a lower-resolution formula,
corresponds to the well-known quasiclassical approximation, conventionally
invoked in settings involving superconductivity. The second, a
higher-resolution formula, allows the density of states to be expressed in
terms of: (i) An explicit formula for the level density, valid in the
short-wave limit, for billiards of arbitrary shape and dimensionality. This
level density depends on the billiard shape only through the set of
stationary-length chords of the billiard and the curvature of the boundary at
the endpoints of these chords; and (ii) Higher-resolution corrections to the
level density, expressed as a sum over periodic orbits that creep around the
billiard boundary. Owing to the fact that these creeping orbits are much longer
than the stationary chords, one can, inter alia, hear the stationary chords of
Andreev billiards.Comment: 52 pages, 15 figures, 1 table, RevTe
Universal features of spin transport and breaking of unitary symmetries
When time-reversal symmetry is broken, quantum coherent systems with and without spin rotational symmetry exhibit the same universal behavior in their electric transport properties. We show that spin transport discriminates between these two cases. In systems with large charge conductance, spin transport is essentially insensitive to the breaking of time-reversal symmetry, while in the opposite limit of a single exit transport channel, spin currents vanish identically in the presence of time-reversal symmetry but can be turned on by breaking it with an orbital magnetic field
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