86 research outputs found
Spin transport in ferromagnet-InSb nanowire quantum devices
Signatures of Majorana zero modes (MZMs), which are the building blocks for
fault-tolerant topological quantum computing, have been observed in
semiconductor nanowires (NW) with strong spin-orbital-interaction (SOI), such
as InSb and InAs NWs with proximity-induced superconductivity. Realizing
topological superconductivity and MZMs in this most widely-studied platform
also requires eliminating spin degeneracy, which is realized by applying a
magnetic field to induce a helical gap. However, the applied field can
adversely impact the induced superconducting state in the NWs and also places
geometric restrictions on the device, which can affect scaling of future
MZM-based quantum registers. These challenges could be circumvented by
integrating magnetic elements with the NWs. With this motivation, in this work
we report the first experimental investigation of spin transport across InSb
NWs, which are enabled by devices with ferromagnetic (FM) contacts. We observe
signatures of spin polarization and spin-dependent transport in the
quasi-one-dimensional ballistic regime. Moreover, we show that electrostatic
gating tunes the observed magnetic signal and also reveals a transport regime
where the device acts as a spin filter. These results open an avenue towards
developing MZM devices in which spin degeneracy is lifted locally, without the
need of an applied magnetic field. They also provide a path for realizing
spin-based devices that leverage spin-orbital states in quantum wires.Comment: 30 pages, 12 figure
Reconsidering the Barefoot Doctor Programme
This paper examines the widely acclaimed Barefoot Doctor campaign in China. The Barefoot Doctor Campaign has come to symbolize the success of Chinese health care to the extent that it has become a model for WHO public health strategy. Yet little has been done to understand how or whether it worked on the ground and what difficulties and contradictions emerged in its implementation. Using previously unexplored party archives as well as newly collected oral interviews, this paper moves away from a narrow focus on party politics and policy formulation by examining the reality of health care at the local level and the challenges faced by local authorities and individuals as the campaigns evolved
Villain Stardom in Socialist China: Chen Qiang and the Cultural Politics of Affect
Despite playing various kinds of roles across genres from 1949 to 1965, Chen Qiang acquired stardom mainly due to his remarkable screen performance as villainous landlords in socialist China. His villain stardom is an aberrant case, compared to the majority of film stars in Chinese socialist cinema who encouraged identification and emulation and helped propagate socialist ideology to reform Chinese citizens. Paying special attention to socio-historically specific film exhibition practices and the actor's own reflections on his villain performance, this article argues that Chen's stardom functioned as an important affective technology within a wider and complex Communist propaganda enterprise in that it helped cultivate class hatred necessary for the Communist revolution and socialist land reform campaigns. Through this case study, the article suggests that close engagement with both cultural–historical specificities of cinema and recent critical theories of affect open up a space for researching the diversified star phenomena in contemporary China
- …