2,712 research outputs found
Ferromagnetic 0-pi Junctions as Classical Spins
The ground state of highly damped PdNi based 0-pi ferromagnetic Josephson
junctions shows a spontaneous half quantum vortex, sustained by a supercurrent
of undetermined sign. This supercurrent flows in the electrode of a Josephson
junction used as a detector and produces a phi(0)/4 shift in its magnetic
diffraction pattern. We have measured the statistics of the positive or
negative sign shift occurring at the superconducting transition of such a
junction. The randomness of the shift sign, the reproducibility of its
magnitude and the possibility of achieving exact flux compensation upon field
cooling: all these features show that 0-pi junctions behave as classical spins,
just as magnetic nanoparticles with uniaxial anisotropy.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Kondo resonance in a nanotube quantum dot coupled to a normal and a superconducting lead
We report on electrical transport measurements through a carbon nanotube
quantum dot coupled to a normal and a superconducting lead. The ratio of Kondo
temperature and superconducting gap is identified to govern the
transport properties of the system. In the case of the
conductance resonance splits into two resonances at . For the
opposite scenario the conductance resonance persists, however
the conductance is not enhanced compared to the normal state due to a relative
asymmetry of the lead-dot couplings. Within this limit the data is in agreement
with a simple model of a resonant SN-interface.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. submitted to the Proc. Rencontres de Moriond on
Quantum Information and Decoherence in Nanosystems 200
0-pi oscillations in nanostructured Nb/Fe/Nb Josephson junctions
The physics of the phase shift in ferromagnetic Josephson junctions may
enable a range of applications for spin-electronic devices and quantum
computing. We investigate transitions from ``0'' to ``'' states in
Nb/Fe/Nb Josephson junctions by varying the Fe barrier thickness from 0.5 nm to
5.5 nm. From magnetic measurements we estimate for Fe a magnetic dead layer of
about 1.1 nm. By fitting the characteristic voltage oscillations with existing
theoretical models we extrapolate an exchange energy of 256 meV, a Fermi
velocity of m/s and an electron mean free path of 6.2 nm, in
agreement with other reported values. From the temperature dependence of the
product we show that its decay rate exhibits a nonmonotonic
oscillatory behavior with the Fe barrier thickness.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Eur. Phys. J.
Photon mediated interaction between distant quantum dot circuits
Engineering the interaction between light and matter is an important goal in
the emerging field of quantum opto-electronics. Thanks to the use of cavity
quantum electrodynamics architectures, one can envision a fully hybrid
multiplexing of quantum conductors. Here, we use such an architecture to couple
two quantum dot circuits . Our quantum dots are separated by 200 times their
own size, with no direct tunnel and electrostatic couplings between them. We
demonstrate their interaction, mediated by the cavity photons. This could be
used to scale up quantum bit architectures based on quantum dot circuits or
simulate on-chip phonon-mediated interactions between strongly correlated
electrons
Shot noise in carbon nanotube based Fabry-Perot interferometers
We report on shot noise measurements in carbon nanotube based Fabry-Perot
electronic interferometers. As a consequence of quantum interferences, the
noise power spectral density oscillates as a function of the voltage applied to
the gate electrode. The quantum shot noise theory accounts for the data
quantitatively. It allows to confirm the existence of two nearly degenerate
orbitals. At resonance, the transmission of the nanotube approaches unity, and
the nanotube becomes noiseless, as observed in quantum point contacts. In this
weak backscattering regime, the dependence of the noise on the backscattering
current is found weaker than expected, pointing either to electron-electron
interactions or to weak decoherence
Thermal shot noise in top-gated single carbon nanotube field effect transistors
The high-frequency transconductance and current noise of top-gated single
carbon nanotube transistors have been measured and used to investigate hot
electron effects in one-dimensional transistors. Results are in good agreement
with a theory of 1-dimensional nano-transistor. In particular the prediction of
a large transconductance correction to the Johnson-Nyquist thermal noise
formula is confirmed experimentally. Experiment shows that nanotube transistors
can be used as fast charge detectors for quantum coherent electronics with a
resolution of in the 0.2- band.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figure
Conserved spin and orbital phase along carbon nanotubes connected with multiple ferromagnetic contacts
We report on spin dependent transport measurements in carbon nanotubes based
multi-terminal circuits. We observe a gate-controlled spin signal in non-local
voltages and an anomalous conductance spin signal, which reveal that both the
spin and the orbital phase can be conserved along carbon nanotubes with
multiple ferromagnetic contacts. This paves the way for spintronics devices
exploiting both these quantum mechanical degrees of freedom on the same
footing.Comment: 8 pages - minor differences with published versio
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