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суббота, 31 марта 2018 г.

Latest nanowire experiment boosts confidence in Majorana…


Latest nanowire experiment boosts confidence in Majorana sighting


New test matches theory and offers the best evidence yet for the oddball particles.



In the latest experiment of its kind, researchers have captured the most compelling evidence to date that unusual particles lurk inside a special kind of superconductor. The result, which confirms theoretical predictions first made nearly a decade ago at the Joint Quantum Institute (JQI) and the University of Maryland (UMD), will be published in the April 5 issue of Nature.


The stowaways, dubbed Majorana quasiparticles, are different from ordinary matter like electrons or quarks – the stuff that makes up the elements of the periodic table. Unlike those particles, which as far as physicists know can’t be broken down into more basic pieces, Majorana quasiparticles arise from coordinated patterns of many atoms and electrons and only appear under special conditions. They are endowed with unique features that may allow them to form the backbone of one type of quantum computer, and researchers have been chasing after them for years.


The latest result is the most tantalizing yet for Majorana hunters, confirming many theoretical predictions and laying the groundwork for more refined experiments in the future. In the new work, researchers measured the electrical current passing through an ultra-thin semiconductor connected to a strip of superconducting aluminum – a recipe that transforms the whole combination into a special kind of superconductor.



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