New directions in the pursuit of Majorana fermions in solid state systems
Jason Alicea

TL;DR
This review discusses recent progress in the search for Majorana fermions in solid state systems, focusing on engineered heterostructures, detection methods, and their potential for quantum computing.
Contribution
It highlights new experimental and theoretical approaches to realize and detect Majorana fermions in condensed matter, emphasizing engineered heterostructures and measurement techniques.
Findings
Engineered heterostructures can host Majorana fermions.
Detection methods include tunneling, Josephson effects, and interferometry.
Majorana fermions exhibit non-Abelian statistics with quantum computing potential.
Abstract
The 1937 theoretical discovery of Majorana fermions--whose defining property is that they are their own anti-particles--has since impacted diverse problems ranging from neutrino physics and dark matter searches to the fractional quantum Hall effect and superconductivity. Despite this long history the unambiguous observation of Majorana fermions nevertheless remains an outstanding goal. This review article highlights recent advances in the condensed matter search for Majorana that have led many in the field to believe that this quest may soon bear fruit. We begin by introducing in some detail exotic `topological' one- and two-dimensional superconductors that support Majorana fermions at their boundaries and at vortices. We then turn to one of the key insights that arose during the past few years; namely, that it is possible to `engineer' such exotic superconductors in the laboratory by…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
