515 research outputs found

    Approximations for the inverse of Toeplitz matrices with applications to stationary processes

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    AbstractSeveral approximations for the inverse of symmetric Toeplitz matrices are compared by a new approximation criterion. The criterion requires the approximation to be uniformly good over a set of matrices which increases with the size. Furthermore, a new approximation is introduced by applying a taper to the classical Whittle approximation

    Universal nonequilibrium signatures of Majorana zero modes in quench dynamics

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    The quantum evolution after a metallic lead is suddenly connected to an electron system contains information about the excitation spectrum of the combined system. We exploit this type of "quantum quench" to probe the presence of Majorana fermions at the ends of a topological superconducting wire. We obtain an algebraically decaying overlap (Loschmidt echo) L(t)=∣<ψ(0)∣ψ(t)>∣2∼t−α{\cal L}(t)=| < \psi(0) | \psi(t) > |^2\sim t^{-\alpha} for large times after the quench, with a universal critical exponent α\alpha=1/4 that is found to be remarkably robust against details of the setup, such as interactions in the normal lead, the existence of additional lead channels or the presence of bound levels between the lead and the superconductor. As in recent quantum dot experiments, this exponent could be measured by optical absorption, offering a new signature of Majorana zero modes that is distinct from interferometry and tunneling spectroscopy.Comment: 9 pages + appendices, 4 figures. v3: published versio

    Edge effects and efficient parameter estimation for stationary random fields

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    We consider the estimation of the parameters of a stationary random field on d-dimensional lattice by minimizing the classical Whittle approximation to the Gaussian log likelihood. If the usual biased sample covariances are used, the estimate is efficient only in one dimension. To remove this edge effect, we introduce data tapers and show that the resulting modified estimate is efficient also in two and three dimensions. This avoids the use of the unbiased sample covariances which are in general not positive-definit

    Quantized conductance at the Majorana phase transition in a disordered superconducting wire

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    Superconducting wires without time-reversal and spin-rotation symmetries can be driven into a topological phase that supports Majorana bound states. Direct detection of these zero-energy states is complicated by the proliferation of low-lying excitations in a disordered multi-mode wire. We show that the phase transition itself is signaled by a quantized thermal conductance and electrical shot noise power, irrespective of the degree of disorder. In a ring geometry, the phase transition is signaled by a period doubling of the magnetoconductance oscillations. These signatures directly follow from the identification of the sign of the determinant of the reflection matrix as a topological quantum number.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures; v3: added appendix with numerics for long-range disorde

    Geodesic scattering by surface deformations of a topological insulator

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    We consider the classical ballistic dynamics of massless electrons on the conducting surface of a three-dimensional topological insulator, influenced by random variations of the surface height. By solving the geodesic equation and the Boltzmann equation in the limit of shallow deformations, we obtain the scattering cross section and the conductivity {\sigma}, for arbitrary anisotropic dispersion relation. At large surface electron densities n this geodesic scattering mechanism (with {\sigma} propto sqrt{n}) is more effective at limiting the surface conductivity than electrostatic potential scattering.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure

    Spectral Domain Bootstrap Tests for Stationary Time Series

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    For stationary linear processes Kolmogorov-Smirnov type goodness-of-fit tests for compound hypotheses based on frequency domain bootstrap methods are proposed. Similar botstrap tests for comparing the spectral distributions of two time series are suggested. The small sample performance of the tests is investigated by simulation, and a real data example is given for illustration

    Quantum point contact as a probe of a topological superconductor

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    We calculate the conductance of a ballistic point contact to a superconducting wire, produced by the s-wave proximity effect in a semiconductor with spin-orbit coupling in a parallel magnetic field. The conductance G as a function of contact width or Fermi energy shows plateaus at half-integer multiples of 4e^2/h if the superconductor is in a topologically nontrivial phase. In contrast, the plateaus are at the usual integer multiples in the topologically trivial phase. Disorder destroys all plateaus except the first, which remains precisely quantized, consistent with previous results for a tunnel contact. The advantage of a ballistic contact over a tunnel contact as a probe of the topological phase is the strongly reduced sensitivity to finite voltage or temperature.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures; corrected App.

    Random-matrix theory of Andreev reflection from a topological superconductor

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    We calculate the probability distribution of the Andreev reflection eigenvalues R_n at the Fermi level in the circular ensemble of random-matrix theory. Without spin-rotation symmetry, the statistics of the electrical conductance G depends on the topological quantum number Q of the superconductor. We show that this dependence is nonperturbative in the number N of scattering channels, by proving that the p-th cumulant of G is independent of Q for p<N/d (with d=2 or d=1 in the presence or in the absence of time-reversal symmetry). A large-N effect such as weak localization cannot, therefore, probe the topological quantum number. For small N we calculate the full distribution P(G) of the conductance and find qualitative differences in the topologically trivial and nontrivial phases.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures (published version

    A Kriging procedure for processes indexed by graphs

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    International audienceWe provide a new kriging procedure of processes on graphs. Based on the construction of Gaussian random processes indexed by graphs, we extend to this framework the usual linear prediction method for spatial random fields, known as kriging. We provide the expression of the estimator of such a random field at unobserved locations as well as a control for the prediction error

    Zero-voltage conductance peak from weak antilocalization in a Majorana nanowire

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    We show that weak antilocalization by disorder competes with resonant Andreev reflection from a Majorana zero-mode to produce a zero-voltage conductance peak of order e^2/h in a superconducting nanowire. The phase conjugation needed for quantum interference to survive a disorder average is provided by particle-hole symmetry - in the absence of time-reversal symmetry and without requiring a topologically nontrivial phase. We identify methods to distinguish the Majorana resonance from the weak antilocalization effect.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures. Addendum, February 2014: Appendix B shows results for weak antilocalization in the circular ensemble. (This appendix is not in the published version.
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