28 research outputs found
Negative Magnetoresistance in Amorphous Indium Oxide Wires
We study magneto-transport properties of several amorphous Indium oxide
nanowires of different widths. The wires show superconducting transition at
zero magnetic field, but, there exist a finite resistance at the lowest
temperature. The broadening was explained by available phase slip
models. At low field, and far below the superconducting critical temperature,
the wires with diameter equal to or less than 100 nm, show negative
magnetoresistance (nMR). The magnitude of nMR and the crossover field are found
to be dependent on both temperature and the cross-sectional area. We find that
this intriguing behavior originates from the interplay between two field
dependent contributions.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
Enhancing the Coherence of a Spin Qubit by Operating it as a Feedback Loop That Controls its Nuclear Spin Bath
In many realizations of electron spin qubits the dominant source of
decoherence is the fluctuating nuclear spin bath of the host material. The
slowness of this bath lends itself to a promising mitigation strategy where the
nuclear spin bath is prepared in a narrowed state with suppressed fluctuations.
Here, this approach is realized for a two-electron spin qubit in a GaAs double
quantum dot and a nearly ten-fold increase in the inhomogeneous dephasing time
is demonstrated. Between subsequent measurements, the bath is prepared
by using the qubit as a feedback loop that first measures its nuclear
environment by coherent precession, and then polarizes it depending on the
final state. This procedure results in a stable fixed point at a nonzero
polarization gradient between the two dots, which enables fast universal qubit
control.Comment: Journal version. Improved clarity of presentation and more concise
terminology. 4 pages, 3 figures. Supplementary document included as ancillary
fil
Universal lineshape of the Kondo zero-bias anomaly in a quantum dot
Encouraged by the recent real-time renormalization group results we carried
out a detailed analysis of the nonequilibrium Kondo conductance observed in an
InAs nanowire-based quantum dot and found them to be in excellent agreement. We
show that in a wide range of bias the Kondo conductance zero-bias anomaly is
scaled by the Kondo temperature to a universal lineshape predicted by the
numerical study. The lineshape can be approximated by a phenomenological
expression of a single argument . The knowledge of
an analytical expression for the lineshape provides an alternative way for
estimation of the Kondo temperature in a real experiment, with no need for time
consuming temperature dependence measurements of the linear conductance.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Controlled Dephasing of a Quantum Dot: From Coherent to Sequential Tunneling
Resonant tunneling through identical potential barriers is a textbook problem
in quantum mechanics. Its solution yields total transparency (100% tunneling)
at discrete energies. This dramatic phenomenon results from coherent
interference among many trajectories, and it is the basis of transport through
periodic structures. Resonant tunneling of electrons is commonly seen in
semiconducting 'quantum dots'. Here we demonstrate that detecting
(distinguishing) electron trajectories in a quantum dot (QD) renders the QD
nearly insulating. We couple trajectories in the QD to a 'detector' by
employing edge channels in the integer quantum Hall regime. That is, we couple
electrons tunneling through an inner channel to electrons in the neighboring
outer, 'detector' channel. A small bias applied to the detector channel
suffices to dephase (quench) the resonant tunneling completely. We derive a
formula for dephasing that agrees well with our data and implies that just a
few electrons passing through the detector channel suffice to dephase the QD
completely. This basic experiment shows how path detection in a QD induces a
transition from delocalization (due to coherent tunneling) to localization
(sequential tunneling)
Charge of a quasiparticle in a superconductor
Non-linear charge transport in SIS Josephson junctions has a unique signature
in the shuttled charge quantum between the two superconductors. In the
zero-bias limit Cooper pairs, each with twice the electron charge, carry the
Josephson current. An applied bias leads to multiple Andreev
reflections (MAR), which in the limit of weak tunneling probability should lead
to integer multiples of the electron charge traversing the junction, with
integer larger than and the superconducting
order parameter. Exceptionally, just above the gap, , with
Andreev reflections suppressed, one would expect the current to be carried by
partitioned quasiparticles; each with energy dependent charge, being a
superposition of an electron and a hole. Employing shot noise measurements in
an SIS junction induced in an InAs nanowire (with noise proportional to the
partitioned charge), we first observed quantization of the partitioned charge
, with ; thus reaffirming the validity of our charge
interpretation. Concentrating next on the bias region
, we found a reproducible and clear dip in the
extracted charge to , which, after excluding other
possibilities, we attribute to the partitioned quasiparticle charge. Such dip
is supported by numerical simulations of our SIS structure