6–11 Jun 2021
Underline Conference System
America/Toronto timezone
Welcome to the 2021 CAP Congress Program website! / Bienvenue au siteweb du programme du Congrès de l'ACP 2021!

Reducing Majorana Hybridization via Periodic Driving

9 Jun 2021, 13:05
3m
Underline Conference System

Underline Conference System

Oral not-in-competition (Graduate Student) / Orale non-compétitive (Étudiant(e) du 2e ou 3e cycle) Condensed Matter and Materials Physics / Physique de la matière condensée et matériaux (DCMMP-DPMCM) W2-9 Contributed Talks II (DCMMP) / Conférences soumises II (DPMCM)

Speaker

Brett Min (McGill University)

Description

It is an ongoing challenge to engineer setups in which Majorana zero modes at the ends of one-dimensional topological superconductor are well isolated which is the essence of topological protection. Recent developments have indicated that periodic deriving of a system can dynamically induce symmetries that its static counterpart does not possess [1]. We further develop the original protocol [2] where this idea [1] is applied to a system of quantum dot (QD) coupled to a Kitaev chain hosting an imperfect (overlapping) Majorana zero modes. We numerically simulate a protocol in which an electron periodically hops back and forth from the QD and the wire. We demonstrate that the current protocol reduces a non-zero hybridization energy that manifests from imperfect Majoranas by orders of magnitude. Furthermore, we examine the efficiency of the suppression and how robust it is to imperfections.

[1] K. Agarwal and I. Martin, Phys. Rev. Lett. 125, 080602 (2020).

[2] I. Martin and K. Agarwal, PRX Quantum 1, 020324 (2020).

Authors

Kartiek Agarwal (McGill University) Dr Ivar Martin (Argonne National Laboratory) Brett Min (McGill University) Prof. Tamar Pereg-Barnea (McGill University)

Presentation materials

There are no materials yet.