105 research outputs found
Giant Triplet Proximity Effect in -biased Josephson Junctions with Spin-Orbit Coupling
In diffusive Josephson junctions the phase-difference between the
superconductors strongly influences the spectroscopic features of the layer
separating them. The observation of a uniform minigap and its phase modulation
were only recently experimentally reported, demonstrating agreement with
theoretical predictions up to now - a vanishing minigap at .
Remarkably, we find that in the presence of intrinsic spin-orbit coupling a
giant proximity effect due to spin-triplet Cooper pairs can develop at
, in complete contrast to the suppressed proximity effect without
spin-orbit coupling. We here report a combined numerical and analytical study
of this effect, proving its presence solely based on symmetry arguments, which
makes it independent of the specific parameters used in experiments. We show
that the spectroscopic signature of the triplets is present throughout the
entire ferromagnetic layer. Our finding offers a new way to artificially
create, control and isolate spin-triplet superconductivity.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Optimal correction of independent and correlated errors
We identify optimal quantum error correction codes for situations that do not
admit perfect correction. We provide analytic n-qubit results for standard
cases with correlated errors on multiple qubits and demonstrate significant
improvements to the fidelity bounds and optimal entanglement decay profiles.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures. Updated to include fidelity analysi
Controlling superconducting spin flow with spin-flip immunity using a single homogeneous ferromagnet
Spin transport via electrons is typically plagued by Joule heating and short
decay lengths due to spin-flip scattering. It is known that dissipationless
spin currents can arise when using conventional superconducting contacts, yet
this has only been experimentally demonstrated when using intricate
magnetically inhomogeneous multilayers, or in extreme cases such as half-metals
with interfacial magnetic disorder. Moreover, it is unknown how such spin
supercurrents decay in the presence of spin-flip scattering. Here, we present a
method for generating a spin supercurrent by using only a single homogeneous
magnetic element. Remarkably, the spin supercurrent generated in this way does
not decay spatially, in stark contrast to normal spin currents that remain
polarized only up to the spin relaxation length. We also expose the existence
of a superconductivity-mediated torque even without magnetic inhomogeneities,
showing that the different components of the spin supercurrent polarization
respond fundamentally differently to a change in the superconducting phase
difference. This establishes a mechanism for tuning dissipationless spin and
charge flow separately, and confirms the advantage that superconductors can
offer in spintronics.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in Nature Scientific
Report
Extended two-level quantum dissipative system from bosonization of the elliptic spin-1/2 Kondo model
We study the elliptic spin-1/2 Kondo model (spin-1/2 fermions in one
dimension with fully anisotropic contact interactions with a magnetic impurity)
in the light of mappings to bosonic systems using the fermion-boson
correspondence and associated unitary transformations. We show that for fixed
fermion number, the bosonic system describes a two-level quantum dissipative
system with two noninteracting copies of infinitely-degenerate upper and lower
levels. In addition to the standard tunnelling transitions, and the transitions
driven by the dissipative coupling, there are also bath-mediated transitions
between the upper and lower states which simultaneously effect shifts in the
horizontal degeneracy label. We speculate that these systems could provide new
examples of continuous time quantum random walks, which are exactly solvable.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figur
Quasiclassical theory for the superconducting proximity effect in Dirac materials
We derive the quasiclassical non-equilibrium Eilenberger and Usadel equations
to first order in quantities small compared to the Fermi energy, valid for
Dirac edge and surface electrons with spin-momentum locking, as relevant for
topological insulators. We discuss in detail several of the key technical
points and assumptions of the derivation, and provide a Riccati-parametrization
of the equations. Solving first the equilibrium equations for S/N and S/F
bilayers and Josephson junctions, we study the superconducting proximity effect
in Dirac materials. Similarly to related works, we find that the effect of an
exchange field depends strongly on the direction of the field. Only components
normal to the transport direction lead to attenuation of the Cooper pair
wavefunction inside the F. Fields parallel to the transport direction lead to
phase-shifts in the dependence on the superconducting phase difference for both
the charge current and density of states in an S/F/S-junction. Moreover, we
compute the differential conductance in S/N and S/F bilayers with an applied
voltage bias, and determine the dependence on the length of the N and F regions
and the exchange field.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Critical Temperature and Tunneling Spectroscopy of Superconductor-Ferromagnet Hybrids with Intrinsic Rashba-Dresselhaus Spin-Orbit Coupling
We investigate theoretically how the proximity effect in
superconductor/ferromagnet hybrid structures with intrinsic spin-orbit coupling
manifests in the density of states and critical temperature. To describe a
general scenario, we allow for both Rashba and Dresselhaus type spin-orbit
coupling. Our results are obtained via the quasiclassical theory of
superconductivity, extended to include spin-orbit coupling in the Usadel
equation and Kupriyanov--Lukichev boundary conditions. Unlike previous works,
we have derived a Riccati parametrization of the Usadel equation with
spin-orbit coupling which allows us to address the full proximity regime.
First, we consider the density of states in both SF bilayers and SFS trilayers,
where the spectroscopic features in the latter case are sensitive to the phase
difference between the two superconductors. We find that the presence of
spin-orbit coupling leaves clear spectroscopic fingerprints in the density of
states due to its role in creating spin-triplet Cooper pairs. Unlike SF and SFS
structures without spin-orbit coupling, the density of states in the present
case depends strongly on the direction of magnetization. We show that the
spin-orbit coupling can stabilize singlet superconductivity even in the
presence of a strong exchange field . This leads to the
possibility of a magnetically tunable minigap: changing the direction of the
exchange field opens and closes the minigap. We also determine how the critical
temperature of an SF bilayer is affected by spin-orbit coupling and
demonstrate that one can achieve a spin-valve effect with a single ferromagnet.
We find that displays highly non-monotonic behavior both as a function of
the magnetization direction and the type and direction of the spin-orbit
coupling, offering a new way to exert control over the superconductivity of
proximity structures.Comment: 25 pages, 21 figures. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
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