Coupling individual atoms fundamentally changes the state of matter: electrons bound to atomic cores become delocalized turning an insulating state to a metallic one. A chain of atoms could lead to more exotic states if the tunneling takes place via the superconducting vacuum and can induce topologically protected excitations like Majorana or parafermions. Although coupling a single atom to a superconductor is well studied, the hybridization of two sites with individual tunability was not reported yet. The peculiar vacuum of the Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) condensate opens the way to annihilate or generate two electrons from the bulk resulting in a so-called Andreev molecular state. By employing parallel nanowires with an Al shell, two artificial atoms were created at a minimal distance with an epitaxial superconducting link between. Hybridization via the BCS vacuum was observed and the spectrum of an Andreev molecule as a function of level positions was explored for the first time.
CITATION STYLE
Kürtössy, O., Scherübl, Z., Fülöp, G., Lukács, I. E., Kanne, T., Nygård, J., … Csonka, S. (2021). Andreev Molecule in Parallel InAs Nanowires. Nano Letters, 21(19), 7929–7937. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.nanolett.1c01956
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