4.8 Article

Experimental Detection of a Majorana Mode in the core of a Magnetic Vortex inside a Topological Insulator-Superconductor Bi2Te3/NbSe2 Heterostructure

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS
Volume 114, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.114.017001

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) of China [2013CB921902, 2012CB927401, 2011CB921902, 2011CB922200, 2011CBA00108, 2011CB922101]
  2. NSFC [91021002, 11174199, 11134008, 11274228, 11227404, 11023002, 11274269]
  3. RGC GRF [707211]

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Majorana fermions have been intensively studied in recent years for their importance to both fundamental science and potential applications in topological quantum computing. They are predicted to exist in a vortex core of superconducting topological insulators. However, it is extremely difficult to distinguish them experimentally from other quasiparticle states for the tiny energy difference between Majorana fermions and these states, which is beyond the energy resolution of most available techniques. Here, we circumvent the problem by systematically investigating the spatial profile of the Majorana mode and the bound quasiparticle states within a vortex in Bi2Te3 films grown on a superconductor NbSe2. While the zero bias peak in local conductance splits right off the vortex center in conventional superconductors, it splits off at a finite distance similar to 20 nm away from the vortex center in Bi2Te3. This unusual splitting behavior has never been observed before and could be possibly due to the Majorana fermion zero mode. While the Majorana mode is destroyed by the interaction between vortices, the zero bias peak splits as a conventional superconductor again. This work provides self-consistent evidences of Majorana fermions and also suggests a possible route to manipulating them.

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