Spin-resolved Andreev levels and parity crossings in hybrid superconductor-semiconductor nanowires
ORAL
Abstract
I will present measurements and theory of the Zeeman effect on the Andreev levels of a semiconductor quantum dot, based on an InAs nanowire, with large electron g-factors strongly coupled to a conventional superconductor with large critical field. This material combination allows spin degeneracy to be lifted without destroying superconductivity. When the system is in a spin singlet state, a spin-split Andreev level crossing the Fermi energy results in a quantum phase transition to a spin-polarized state, implying a change in the fermionic parity of the system. This crossing manifests itself as a finite-field, zero-bias conductance anomaly [1] whose properties resemble those expected for Majorana modes in a topological superconductor [2-3]. While this resemblance is understood without evoking topological superconductivity, the observed parity transitions could be regarded as precursors of Majorana modes in the long-wire limit [4]. \\[4pt] [1] E. J. H. Lee, X. Jiang, M. Houzet, R.Aguado, C. M. Lieber, and S. De Franceschi, Nature Nanotechnology, in press (2013).\\[0pt] [2] V. Mourik, et al, Science 336, 1003-1007 (2012).\\[0pt] [3] A. Das, et al. Nature Phys. 8, 887-895 (2012).\\[0pt] [4] T. D. Stanescu, et al, Phys. Rev. B 87, 094518 (2013).
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