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Supercurrent vortex pinball via a triplet Cooper pair inverse Edelstein effect

Supercurrent vortex pinball via a triplet Cooper pair inverse Edelstein effect We consider the Josephson effect through a thin spin-orbit coupled layer in the presence of an exchange field h and discover a set of supercurrent vortices appearing in the system which can be controllably moved around in the system by varying either the direction of h, the strength |h|, the spin-orbit coupling magnitude α via a gate voltage, or the phase difference. We refer to this phenomenon as a supercurrent vortex pinball effect and show that its origin is the spin polarization of the triplet Cooper pairs induced in the system. The supercurrent vortices are shown to arise from what resembles a Cooper pair-induced inverse Edelstein effect. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Physical Review B American Physical Society (APS)

Supercurrent vortex pinball via a triplet Cooper pair inverse Edelstein effect

Physical Review B , Volume 96 (6) – Aug 9, 2017

Supercurrent vortex pinball via a triplet Cooper pair inverse Edelstein effect

Physical Review B , Volume 96 (6) – Aug 9, 2017

Abstract

We consider the Josephson effect through a thin spin-orbit coupled layer in the presence of an exchange field h and discover a set of supercurrent vortices appearing in the system which can be controllably moved around in the system by varying either the direction of h, the strength |h|, the spin-orbit coupling magnitude α via a gate voltage, or the phase difference. We refer to this phenomenon as a supercurrent vortex pinball effect and show that its origin is the spin polarization of the triplet Cooper pairs induced in the system. The supercurrent vortices are shown to arise from what resembles a Cooper pair-induced inverse Edelstein effect.

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Publisher
American Physical Society (APS)
Copyright
Copyright © ©2017 American Physical Society
ISSN
1098-0121
eISSN
1550-235X
DOI
10.1103/PhysRevB.96.064508
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

We consider the Josephson effect through a thin spin-orbit coupled layer in the presence of an exchange field h and discover a set of supercurrent vortices appearing in the system which can be controllably moved around in the system by varying either the direction of h, the strength |h|, the spin-orbit coupling magnitude α via a gate voltage, or the phase difference. We refer to this phenomenon as a supercurrent vortex pinball effect and show that its origin is the spin polarization of the triplet Cooper pairs induced in the system. The supercurrent vortices are shown to arise from what resembles a Cooper pair-induced inverse Edelstein effect.

Journal

Physical Review BAmerican Physical Society (APS)

Published: Aug 9, 2017

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