Physicists at the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen have solved a 60-year mystery by creating their own semiconductor-superconducting platform that replicates the conditions of superconducting vortices, allowing them to observe Andreev subgap states as one-dimensional van Hove singularities whose energy spacing is comparable to the superconducting gap and are independent from Fermi energy, making them easier to detect than the original phenomena.
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Physicists in Copenhagen have cracked a 60-year-old [music] quantum code.
They had to create their own world to do it.
>> [music] >> For six decades, physicists have puzzled over the mysterious quantum states [music] hidden within superconducting vortices.
These elusive [music] phenomena occurred at such minute energy levels that for years [music] they seemed virtually impossible to directly observe.
No available research [music] instruments were sensitive enough to detect them, rendering the problem intractable. [music] The breakthrough came from an unexpected source.
Instead of continuing fruitless attempts at direct detection, a team from the Niels Bohr Institute at the University of Copenhagen [music] adopted a completely new strategy.
Led by [music] Professor Søren Vasegaard Olesen, the team set out to create their own material systems that replicated the key conditions [music] for these enigmatic states.
This ingenious shift in approach [music] proved key to solving the problem.
The theory of quantum states in superconducting [music] vortices emerged in the 1960s, but for decades thereafter it remained [music] purely hypothetical.
The main obstacle was the aforementioned [music] extremely low energy levels, which prevented observation.
Only the unconventional approach of [music] Danish researchers provided a solution.
As Vasegaard [music] Olesen explains, building their own research platform allowed [music] for the observation of analogous phenomena under controlled conditions.
This gave scientists the ability to manipulate [music] the experimental parameters.
The heart of the solution turned out to be a semiconductor [music] superconducting platform, a technology developed in Copenhagen [music] about a decade ago.
The researchers constructed a miniature [music] superconducting cylinder and then applied magnetic flux to reproduce key physical phenomena.
The entire [music] process was akin to finding an alternative path to a seemingly [music] insoluble problem.
This method circumvented fundamental limitations of previous research.
[music] In practice, the team performed tunneling spectroscopy of Andreev subgap [music] states in specially designed nanowires.
These hybrid structures consist of a semiconducting core surrounded by a superconducting shell.
>> [music] >> Under these conditions, they were able to observe analogs of the states naturally [music] occurring in upper cutoff vortices in type two superconductors.
>> [music] >> Of particular significance was the discovery that these analogs manifest as one-dimensional van [music] Hove singularities whose energy spacing is comparable to the superconducting gap.
The most important feature [music] of these artificially created states is their independence from the Fermi energy, which makes them much easier to observe [music] than the original phenomena.
This property was key to the success of the entire endeavor.
>> [music] >> Interestingly, as Veit Kinast admits, the discovery was partially [music] accidental. Researchers stumbled upon these states during experiments.
Nevertheless, [music] their potential applications seem significant, though this should be approached [music] with caution.
The new states could be used to build hybrid quantum simulators, essential for [music] studying complex materials of the future.
This is a significant step in the development of quantum technologies.
Although it will likely take [music] some time before they translate into practical implementations.
The semiconductor [music] superconductor platform, a Copenhagen invention from a [music] decade ago, has once again proven its versatility.
It can be used to study a variety of quantum [music] states, paving the way for further discoveries.
The Danish breakthrough closes a 60-year [music] chapter in quantum physics, while simultaneously opening up new avenues of research.
>> [music] >> It also demonstrates how a creative approach to a scientific impasse can lead to unexpected solutions, even when a problem [music] seems insoluble.
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