4.8 Article

Universal optical control of chiral superconductors and Majorana modes

Journal

NATURE PHYSICS
Volume 15, Issue 8, Pages 766-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41567-019-0532-6

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Funding

  1. Flatiron Institute, a division of the Simons Foundation
  2. DFG through the Emmy Noether programme [KA 3360/2-1, SE 2558/2-1]
  3. European Union Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the European Research Council (ERC) [69409]

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Chiral superconductors are a class of unconventional superconductors that host topologically protected chiral Majorana fermions at interfaces and domain walls(1-3), quasiparticles(4-6) that could serve as a platform for topological quantum computing(7). Here we show that, in analogy to a qubit, the out-of-equilibrium superconducting state in such materials can be described by a Bloch vector and predict that they can be controlled on ultrafast timescales. The all-optical control mechanism is universal, permitting arbitrary rotations of the order parameter, and can induce a dynamical change of handedness of the condensate. It relies on transient breaking of crystal symmetries via choice of pulse polarization to enable arbitrary rotations of the Bloch vector. The mechanism extends to ultrafast timescales and the engineered state persists after the pump is switched off. We predict that these phenomena should appear in graphene(8-10) or magic-angle twisted bilayer graphene(11-14), as well as Sr2RuO4 (refs. (15,16)). Furthermore, we show that chiral superconductivity can be detected in time-resolved pump-probe measurements. This paves the way towards a robust mechanism for ultrafast control and measurement of chirally ordered phases and Majorana modes.

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