152 research outputs found
Tuning Topological Superconductivity in Phase-Controlled Josephson Junctions with Rashba and Dresselhaus Spin-Orbit Coupling
Recently, topological superconductors based on Josephson junctions in
two-dimensional electron gases with strong Rashba spin-orbit coupling have been
proposed as attractive alternatives to wire-based setups. Here, we elucidate
how phase-controlled Josephson junctions based on quantum wells with [001]
growth direction and an arbitrary combination of Rashba and Dresselhaus
spin-orbit coupling can also host Majorana bound states for a wide range of
parameters as long as the magnetic field is oriented appropriately. Hence,
Majorana bound states based on Josephson junctions can appear in a wide class
of two-dimensional electron gases. We study the effect of spin-orbit coupling,
the Zeeman energies, and the superconducting phase difference to create a full
topological phase diagram and find the optimal stability region to observe
Majorana bound states in narrow junctions. Surprisingly, for equal Rashba and
Dresselhaus spin-orbit coupling, well localized Majorana bound states can
appear only for phase differences as the topological gap
protecting the Majorana bound states vanishes at . Our results show
that the ratio between Rashba and Dresselhaus spin-orbit coupling or the choice
of the in-plane crystallographic axis along which the superconducting phase
bias is applied offer additional tunable knobs to test Majorana bound states in
these systems. Finally, we discuss signatures of Majorana bound states that
could be probed experimentally by tunneling conductance measurements at the
edge of the junction.Comment: 21 pages, 12 figure
On calculating the Berry curvature of Bloch electrons using the KKR method
We propose and implement a particularly effective method for calculating the
Berry curvature arising from adiabatic evolution of Bloch states in wave vector
k space. The method exploits a unique feature of the Korringa-Kohn-Rostoker
(KKR) approach to solve the Schr\"odinger or Dirac equations. Namely, it is
based on the observation that in the KKR method k enters the calculation via
the structure constants which depend only on the geometry of the lattice but
not the crystal potential. For both the Abelian and non-Abelian Berry curvature
we derive an analytic formula whose evaluation does not require any numerical
differentiation with respect to k. We present explicit calculations for Al, Cu,
Au, and Pt bulk crystals.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure
Gauge freedom for degenerate Bloch states
In nonmagnetic crystals with inversion symmetry the electronic bands are
twofold degenerate. As a consequence, any orthonormalized linear combination
of the two corresponding eigenfunctions can represent the electron wave
function. A priori it is not obvious which superposition, gauge, should be
chosen to calculate a quantity which is not gauge invariant within a certain
approximation. Here we consider gauge options appropriate under particular
physical conditions
First-principles calculations of the Berry curvature of Bloch states for charge and spin transport of electrons
Recent progress in wave packet dynamics based on the insight of Berry
pertaining to adiabatic evolution of quantum systems has led to the need for a
new property of a Bloch state, the Berry curvature, to be calculated from
first principles. We report here on the response to this challenge by the ab
initio community during the past decade. First we give a tutorial introduction
of the conceptual developments we mentioned above. Then we describe four
methodologies which have been developed for first-principle calculations of
the Berry curvature. Finally, to illustrate the significance of the new
developments, we report some results of calculations of interesting physical
properties such as the anomalous and spin Hall conductivity as well as the
anomalous Nernst conductivity and discuss the influence of the Berry curvature
on the de Haas–van Alphen oscillation
Topological Superconductivity in a Phase-Controlled Josephson Junction
Topological superconductors can support localized Majorana states at their
boundaries. These quasi-particle excitations have non-Abelian statistics that
can be used to encode and manipulate quantum information in a topologically
protected manner. While signatures of Majorana bound states have been observed
in one-dimensional systems, there is an ongoing effort to find alternative
platforms that do not require fine-tuning of parameters and can be easily
scalable to large numbers of states. Here we present a novel experimental
approach towards a two-dimensional architecture. Using a Josephson junction
made of HgTe quantum well coupled to thin-film aluminum, we are able to tune
between a trivial and a topological superconducting state by controlling the
phase difference across the junction and applying an in-plane magnetic
field. We determine the topological state of the induced superconductor by
measuring the tunneling conductance at the edge of the junction. At low
magnetic fields, we observe a minimum in the tunneling spectra near zero bias,
consistent with a trivial superconductor. However, as the magnetic field
increases, the tunneling conductance develops a zero-bias peak which persists
over a range of that expands systematically with increasing magnetic
fields. Our observations are consistent with theoretical predictions for this
system and with full quantum mechanical numerical simulations performed on
model systems with similar dimensions and parameters. Our work establishes this
system as a promising platform for realizing topological superconductivity and
for creating and manipulating Majorana modes and will therefore open new
avenues for probing topological superconducting phases in two-dimensional
systems.Comment: Supplementary contains resized figures. Original files are available
upon reques
First Physics Results at the Physical Pion Mass from Wilson Twisted Mass Fermions at Maximal Twist
We present physics results from simulations of QCD using dynamical
Wilson twisted mass fermions at the physical value of the pion mass. These
simulations were enabled by the addition of the clover term to the twisted mass
quark action. We show evidence that compared to previous simulations without
this term, the pion mass splitting due to isospin breaking is almost completely
eliminated. Using this new action, we compute the masses and decay constants of
pseudoscalar mesons involving the dynamical up and down as well as valence
strange and charm quarks at one value of the lattice spacing,
fm. Further, we determine renormalized quark masses as well as their
scale-independent ratios, in excellent agreement with other lattice
determinations in the continuum limit. In the baryon sector, we show that the
nucleon mass is compatible with its physical value and that the masses of the
baryons do not show any sign of isospin breaking. Finally, we compute
the electron, muon and tau lepton anomalous magnetic moments and show the
results to be consistent with extrapolations of older ETMC data to the
continuum and physical pion mass limits. We mostly find remarkably good
agreement with phenomenology, even though we cannot take the continuum and
thermodynamic limits.Comment: 45 pages, 15 figure
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