63 research outputs found
Topological transitions in ac/dc-driven superconductor nanotubes
Extending of nanostructures into the third dimension has become a major research avenue in condensed-matter physics, because of geometry- and topology-induced phenomena. In this regard, superconductor 3D nanoarchitectures feature magnetic field inhomogeneity, non-trivial topology of Meissner currents and complex dynamics of topological defects. Here, we investigate theoretically topological transitions in the dynamics of vortices and slips of the phase of the order parameter in open superconductor nanotubes under a modulated transport current. Relying upon the time-dependent Ginzburg–Landau equation, we reveal two distinct voltage regimes when (i) a dominant part of the tube is in either the normal or superconducting state and (ii) a complex interplay between vortices, phase-slip regions and screening currents determines a rich FFT voltage spectrum. Our findings unveil novel dynamical states in superconductor open nanotubes, such as paraxial and azimuthal phase-slip regions, their branching and coexistence with vortices, and allow for control of these states by superimposed dc and ac current stimuli
Determination of coordinate dependence of a pinning potential from a microwave experiment with vortices
The measurement of the complex impedance response accompanied by power absorption P(x) in
the radiofrequency and microwave ranges represents a most popular experimental method for the
investigation of pinning mechanisms and vortex dynamics in type-II superconductors. In the
theory, the pinning potential (PP) well for a vortex must be a priori specified in order to subsequently
analyze the measured data. We have theoretically solved the inverse problem at T¼0K
and exemplify how the coordinate dependence of a PP can be determined from a set of experimental
curves P(xjj0) measured at subcritical dc currents 0<j0<jc under a small microwave
excitation j1 jc with frequency x. We furthermore elucidate how and why the depinning frequency
xp, which separates the non-dissipative (quasi-adiabatic) and the dissipative (high-frequency)
regimes of small vortex oscillations in the PP, is reduced with increasing j0. The results
can be directly applied to a wide range of conventional superconductors with a PP subjected to
superimposed dc and small microwave ac currents at T Tc
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