Individual topological tunnelling events of a quantum field probed through their macroscopic consequ

Author:  ["Mitrabhanu Sahu","Myung-Ho Bae","Andrey Rogachev","David Pekker","Tzu-Chieh Wei","Nayana Shah","Paul M. Goldbart","Alexey Bezryadin"]

Publication:  Nature Physics

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Tags:     Physics

Abstract

Phase slips are topological fluctuations that carry the superconducting order-parameter field between distinct current-carrying states. Owing to these phase slips, superconducting nanowires acquire electrical resistance. In such wires, it is well known that at higher temperatures phase slips occur through the process of thermal barrier-crossing by the order-parameter field. At low temperatures, the general expectation is that phase slips should proceed through quantum tunnelling events, which are known as quantum phase slips. However, resistive measurements have produced evidence both for and against the occurrence of quantum phase slips. Here, we report evidence for the observation of individual quantum phase-slip events in homogeneous ultranarrow wires at high bias currents. We accomplish this through measurements of the distribution of switching currents for which the width exhibits a rather counter-intuitive, monotonic increase with decreasing temperature. Importantly, measurements show that in nanowires with larger critical currents, quantum fluctuations dominate thermal fluctuations up to higher temperatures. Measurements of the distribution of stochastic switching currents in homogeneous, ultra-narrow superconducting nanowires provide strong evidence that the low-temperature current-switching in such systems occurs through quantum phase slips—topological quantum fluctuations of the superconducting order parameter via which tunnelling occurs between current-carrying states.

Cite this article

Sahu, M., Bae, MH., Rogachev, A. et al. Individual topological tunnelling events of a quantum field probed through their macroscopic consequences. Nature Phys 5, 503–508 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys1276

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