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How do you recognize the non-abelian quantum Hall effect when you see it. Ady Stern (Weizmann). Papers: Stern & Halperin , PRL Grosfeld & Stern, Rap. Comm. Grosfeld, Simon & Stern, PRL Feldman, Gefen, Kitaev, Law & Stern, Cond-mat Grosfeld, Cooper, Stern & Ilan, Cond-mat. The goal:
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How do you recognize the non-abelian quantum Hall effect when you see it Ady Stern (Weizmann) Papers: Stern & Halperin , PRL Grosfeld & Stern, Rap. Comm. Grosfeld, Simon & Stern, PRL Feldman, Gefen, Kitaev, Law & Stern, Cond-mat Grosfeld, Cooper, Stern & Ilan, Cond-mat
The goal: • Reasonably realistic measurements that will show signatures of particles satisfying non-abelian statistics. • The list: • 0. Pattern formation • Observing the zero energy Majorana modes • Fabry-Perot interferometry • Mach-Zehnder interferometry
Extending the notion of quantum statistics Laughlin quasi-particles Electrons A ground state: Energy gap For abelian states: Adiabatically interchange the position of two excitations
For non-abelian states: With N quasi-particles at fixed positions, the ground state is -degenerate. Interchange of quasi-particles shifts between ground states. For n=5/2 (Moore-Read, Pfaffian), wherel= position of quasi-particles degenerate ground states ….. Permutations between quasi-particles positions topological unitary transformations in the subspace of ground states test ground for TQC (Kitaev, 1997)
What does it take to have non-abelian statistics? 1. Degeneracy of the ground state in the presence of localized quasi-particles 2. Topological interaction between the quasi-particles How do you see them experimentally??
We are non-abelian quasi-particles your leader Call a patent lawyer Read and Moore “If only life was so simple” (Allen, Ann. Ha. 1977)
From electrons at n=5/2 to non-abelian quasi-particles in four steps: Read and Green (2000) Step I: A half filled Landau level on top of two filled Landau levels Step II: the Chern-Simons transformation to Spin polarized composite fermions at zero (average) magnetic field
Step III: fermions at zero magnetic field pair into Cooper pairs Spin polarization requires pairing of odd angular momentum a p-wave super-conductor of composite fermions Step IV: introducing quasi-particles into the super-conductor - shifting the filling factor away from 5/2 The super-conductor is subject to a magnetic field and thus accommodates vortices. The vortices, which are charged, are the non-abelian quasi-particles.
The quadratic BCS mean field Hamiltonian is diagonalized by solving the Bogolubov-deGennes equations
For a single vortex – there is a zero energy mode at the vortex’ core Kopnin, Salomaa (1991), Volovik (1999) Ground state degeneracy Skip steps I and II: Cold atoms forming a p-wave superfluid Gurarie et al.
A p-wave superfluid of fermionic cold atoms • Fermionic atoms with two internal states, “” and “” • Initially, all atoms are in the “” state and form a p-wave superfluid. • How can one detect the different phases of the superfluid using absorption measurements? see also: Tewari, Das Sarma, Nayak, Zhang and Zoller (2006)
Free atoms – a delta function absorption spectrum Eg Eg- 0 Eg -
-atoms form a p-wave superfluid • Rate of excitations between two states • Cooper pairs are broken by absorbing light, generating two quasi-particles with momenta k,-k. • One quasi-particle occupies a -state • Other quasi-particle occupies a -state
The absorption spectrum when the -atoms form a p-wave superfluid weak-pairing phase (>0) Eg- Eg Strong pairing phase (<0) 0 Eg+2|| -
Now, rotate the system (an analog to a magnetic field) • Vortices appear in the superfluid, forming a lattice. • Each vortex carries a Majorana zero mode at its core. • Due to tunneling between core states, a band is formed near zero energy.
Landau levelsare the spectrum of the -atoms c Eg- Eg- t 0 - Eg Eg- c band formed by Majorana fermions near zero energy The absorption spectrum of a rotated system And now back to the quantum Hall effect
The n=5/2 state is mapped onto a p-wave superfluid of composite fermions, with a zero mode in the core of every vortex (a 1/4 charge quasi-particle). We want to demonstrate the topological interaction between the vortices.
A zero energy solution is a spinor g(r) is a localized function in the vortex core All g’s anti-commute, and g2=1. A localized Majorana operator . A subspace of degenerate ground states, with the g’s operating in that subspace. In particular, when a vortex i encircles a vortex j, the ground state is multiplied by the operator gigj Nayak and Wilczek (’96) Ivanov (’01)
An experimental manifestation through interference: Stern and Halperin (2005) Bonderson, Shtengel, Kitaev (2005) Following Das Sarma et al (2005) n=5/2 backscattering = |tleft+tright|2 interference pattern is observed by varying the cell’s area
Gate Voltage, VMG (mV) Current (a.u.) Magnetic Field Followed by an extension to a closed dot n=5/2 cell area Integer quantum Hall effect (adapted from Neder et al., 2006) The prediction for the n=5/2 non-abelian state (weak backscattering limit) cell area
2 The effect of the core states on the interference of backscattering amplitudes depends crucially on the parity of the number of localized states. Before encircling vortex a around vortex 1 - g1ga vortex a around vortex 1 and vortex 2 - g1gag2ga~ g2g1 1 a
After encircling for an even number of localized vortices only the localized vortices are affected (a limited subspace) for an odd number of localized vortices every passing vortex acts on a different subspace
Interference term: for an even number of localized vortices only the localized vortices are affected Interference is seen for an odd number of localized vortices every passing vortex acts on a different subspace interference is dephased |tleft + tright|2 |tright|2 + |tleft|2
n=5/2 Gate Voltage, VMG (mV) Magnetic Field (or voltage on anti-dot) The number of quasi-particles on the island may be tuned by charging an anti-dot, or more simply, by varying the magnetic field. cell area
n=5/2 When interference is seen: Interference term is proportional to Two possible eigenvalues that differ by a minus sign. Cannot be changed by braiding of vortices
Closing the island into a quantum dot – Coulomb blockade: Coulomb blockade ! n=5/2 Transport thermodynamics The spacing between conductance peaks translates to the energy cost of adding an electron. For a conventional super-conductor, spacing alternates between charging energy Ec(add an even electron) charging energy Ec + superconductor gap D (add an odd electron)
a gapless (E=0) edge mode if nis is odd corresponds to D=0 a gapfull (E≠0) edge mode if nis is even corresponds to D≠0 The gap diminishes with the size of the dot ∝ 1/L But this super-conductor is anything but conventional… For the p-wave super-conductor at hand, crucial dependence on the number of bulk localized quasi-particles, nis The gap is with respect to the chemical potential, and not with respect to an absolute energy (similar to the gap in a super-conductor, unlike the gap in the quantum Hall effect)
Cell area (number of electrons in the dot) Magnetic field Even Odd (number of q.p.s in the dot)
What destroys the even-odd effect: • Fluctuating number of vortices on the island, nis • Fluctuations in the state of the nis vortices • Thermal fluctuations of the edges • All these fluctuations smear the interference picture, but signatures of non-abelian statistics may still be seen.
For example, what if nis is time dependent? A simple way to probe exotic statistics: For weak backscattering - a new source of current noise. For Abelian states (n=1/3): Chamon et al. (1997) For the n=5/2 state: G = G0 (nis odd) G0[1 ±b cos(f + pnis/4)] (nis even)
G dG time compared to shot noise bigger when t0 is long enough (Kane PRL, 2003) close in spirit to 1/f noise, but unique to FQHE states.
Summary 1. Non-abelian quantum Hall states are theoretically exciting. 2. Experimental demonstration is highly desired 3. Needed for that – large experimental effort, new theoretical ideas for experiments.