Roman M. Lutchyn
University of Maryland, College Park
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Publication
Featured researches published by Roman M. Lutchyn.
Physical Review Letters | 2010
Jay D. Sau; Roman M. Lutchyn; Sumanta Tewari; S. Das Sarma
We show that a film of a semiconductor in which s-wave superconductivity and Zeeman splitting are induced by the proximity effect, supports zero-energy Majorana fermion modes in the ordinary vortex excitations. Since time-reversal symmetry is explicitly broken, the edge of the film constitutes a chiral Majorana wire. The heterostructure we propose-a semiconducting thin film sandwiched between an s-wave superconductor and a magnetic insulator-is a generic system which can be used as the platform for topological quantum computation by virtue of the existence of non-Abelian Majorana fermions.
Physical Review B | 2008
Łukasz Cywiński; Roman M. Lutchyn; Cody P. Nave; S. Das Sarma
We theoretically investigate the influence of designed pulse sequences in restoring quantum coherence lost due to background noise in superconducting qubits. We consider both 1/f noise and Random Telegraph Noise, and show that the qubit coherence time can be substantially enhanced by carefully engineered pulse sequences. Conversely, the time dependence of qubit coherence under external pulse sequences could be used as a spectroscopic tool for extracting the noise mechanisms in superconducting qubits, i.e. by using Uhrigs pulse sequence one can obtain information about moments of the spectral density of noise. We also study the effect of pulse sequences on the evolution of the qubit affected by a strongly coupled fluctuator, and show that the non-Gaussian features in decoherence are suppressed by the application of pulses.
Physical Review Letters | 2008
Chuanwei Zhang; Sumanta Tewari; Roman M. Lutchyn; S. Das Sarma
Two-dimensional (p(x)+ip(y)) superfluids or superconductors offer a playground for studying intriguing physics such as quantum teleportation, non-Abelian statistics, and topological quantum computation. Creating such a superfluid in cold fermionic atom optical traps using p-wave Feshbach resonance is turning out to be challenging. Here we propose a method to create a p(x)+ip(y) superfluid directly from an s-wave interaction making use of a topological Berry phase, which can be artificially generated. We discuss ways to detect the spontaneous Hall mass current, which acts as a diagnostic for the chiral p-wave superfluid.
Physical Review Letters | 2011
Roman M. Lutchyn; Tudor D. Stanescu; Das Sarma S
We study multiband semiconducting nanowires proximity-coupled with an s-wave superconductor. We show that, when an odd number of subbands are occupied, the system realizes a nontrivial topological state supporting Majorana modes. We study the topological quantum phase transition in this system and calculate the phase diagram as a function of the chemical potential and magnetic field. Our key finding is that multiband occupancy not only lifts the stringent constraint of one-dimensionality but also allows one to have higher carrier density in the nanowire, and as such multisubband nanowires are better suited for observing the Majorana particle. We study the robustness of the topological phase by including the effects of the short- and long-range disorder. We show that there is an optimal regime in the phase diagram (sweet spot) where the topological state is to a large extent insensitive to the presence of disorder.
Physical Review B | 2010
Tudor D. Stanescu; Jay D. Sau; Roman M. Lutchyn; S. Das Sarma
We study the excitation spectrum of a topological insulator in contact with an s-wave superconductor, starting from a microscopic model, and develop an effective low-energy model for the proximity effect. In the vicinity of the Dirac cone vertex, the effective model describing the states localized at the interface is well approximated by a model of Dirac electrons experiencing superconducting s-wave pairing. Away from the cone vertex, the induced pairing potential develops a p-wave component with a magnitude sensitive to the structure of the interface. Observing the induced s-wave superconductivity may require tuning the chemical potential close to the Dirac point. Furthermore, we find that the proximity of the superconductor leads to a significant renormalization of the original parameters of the effective model describing the surface states of a topological insulator.
Physical Review Letters | 2012
Lobos Am; Roman M. Lutchyn; Das Sarma S
We study the interplay between disorder and interaction in one-dimensional topological superconductors which carry localized Majorana zero-energy states. Using Abelian bosonization and the perturbative renormalization group approach, we obtain the renormalization group flow and the associated scaling dimensions of the parameters and identify the critical points of the low-energy theory. We predict a quantum phase transition from a topological superconducting phase to a nontopological localized phase, and obtain the phase boundary between these two phases as a function of the electron-electron interaction and the disorder strength in the nanowire. Based on an instanton analysis which incorporates the effect of disorder, we also identify a large regime of stability of the Majorana-carrying topological phase in the parameter space of the model.
Physical Review B | 2010
Jay D. Sau; Roman M. Lutchyn; Sumanta Tewari; S. Das Sarma
In two-dimensional chiral
Physical Review B | 2008
M. D. Shaw; Roman M. Lutchyn; Per Delsing; P. M. Echternach
p
Physical Review B | 2009
Roman M. Lutchyn; Pavel Nagornykh; Victor M. Yakovenko
-wave superconductors, the zero-energy Majorana fermion excitations trapped at vortex cores are protected from the thermal effects by the minigap,
Physical Review B | 2008
N. A. Court; A. J. Ferguson; Roman M. Lutchyn; R. G. Clark
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