The fractional a.c. Josephson effect in a semiconductor-superconductor nanowire as a signature of Majorana particles

Leonid P. Rokhinson, Birck Nanotechnology Center, Purdue University
Xinyu Liu, University of Notre Dame
Jacek K. Furdyna, University of Notre Dame

Date of this Version

11-2012

Citation

Nature Physics 8, 795–799 (2012)

Abstract

Topological superconductors that support Majorana fermions have been predicted when one-dimensional semiconducting wires are coupled to a superconductor(1-3). Such excitations are expected to exhibit non-Abelian statistics and can be used to realize quantum gates that are topologically protected from local sources of decoherence(4,5). Here we report the observation of the fractional a. c. Josephson effect in a hybrid semiconductor-superconductor InSb/Nb nanowire junction, a hallmark of topological matter. When the junction is irradiated with a radiofrequency f(0) in the absence of an external magnetic field, quantized voltage steps (Shapiro steps) with a height Delta V = hf(0)/2e are observed, as is expected for conventional superconductor junctions, where the supercurrent is carried by charge-2e Cooper pairs. At high magnetic fields the height of the first Shapiro step is doubled to hf(0)/e, suggesting that the supercurrent is carried by charge-e quasiparticles. This is a unique signature of the Majorana fermions, predicted almost 80 years ago(6).

Discipline(s)

Nanoscience and Nanotechnology

 

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