"Status of the Search for Majorana Fermions in Semiconductor Nanowires"

Speaker: Sergey Frolov, University of Pittsburgh

When: April 30, 2018 (Mon), 11:00AM to 12:00PM (add to my calendar)
Location: SCI 328
Hosted by: Alexander Sushkov

This event is part of the Condensed Matter Theory Seminar Series.

Tunneling spectroscopy measurements on one-dimensional superconducting hybrid materials have revealed signatures of Majorana fermions which are the edge states of a bulk topological superconducting phase. We couple strong spin-orbit semiconductor InSb nanowires to conventional superconductors (NbTiN, Al) to obtain additional signatures of Majorana fermions and to explore the topological phase transition. A potent alternative explanation for many of the recent experimental Majorana reports is that a non-topological Andreev state localizes near the end of a nanowire. We compare Andreev and Majorana modes and investigate ways to clearly distinguish the two phenomena. We are also exploring how Andreev states can be chained together along the nanowire to realize the one-dimensional Kitaev model, a discrete way of generating Majorana modes.