Symmetry and Topology in Superconductors - Odd-frequency pairing and edge states -
Yukio Tanaka, Masatoshi Sato, and Naoto Nagaosa

TL;DR
This paper reviews the interplay of symmetry, topology, and odd-frequency pairing in superconductors, focusing on edge states, Andreev bound states, and Majorana fermions, highlighting recent advances in understanding topological superconductivity.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of how odd-frequency pairing and topological properties influence edge states and zero-energy bound states in superconductors.
Findings
Odd-frequency pairing arises in non-uniform superconductors.
Topological indices determine the existence of zero-energy edge states.
Edge states can host Majorana fermions.
Abstract
Superconductivity is a phenomenon where the macroscopic quantum coherence appears due to the pairing of electrons. This offers a fascinating arena to study the physics of broken gauge symmetry. However, the important symmetries in superconductors are not only the gauge invariance. Especially, the symmetry properties of the pairing, i.e., the parity and spin-singlet/spin-triplet, determine the physical properties of the superconducting state. Recently it has been recognized that there is the important third symmetry of the pair amplitude, i.e., even or odd parity with respect to the frequency. The conventional uniform superconducting states correspond to the even-frequency pairing, but the recent finding is that the odd-frequency pair amplitude arises in the spatially non-uniform situation quite ubiquitously. Especially, this is the case in the Andreev bound state (ABS) appearing at the…
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