Magnetization induced by odd-frequency spin-triplet Cooper pairs in a Josephson junction with metallic trilayers
S. Hikino, S. Yunoki

TL;DR
This paper theoretically demonstrates that odd-frequency spin-triplet Cooper pairs induce a controllable magnetization inside a normal metal in a Josephson junction, which can be tuned by phase difference and voltage, offering new avenues for superconducting spintronics.
Contribution
The study reveals how phase difference and voltage control magnetization induced by odd-frequency triplet pairs in Josephson junctions, providing a new mechanism for tunable superconducting spintronics.
Findings
Magnetization inside N is due to odd-frequency spin-triplet pairs.
Magnetization can be controlled by superconducting phase difference q.
Resonance voltages induce a measurable DC magnetization.
Abstract
We theoretically study the magnetization inside a normal metal induced in an s-wave superconductor/ferromagnetic metal/normal metal/ferromagnetic metal/s-wave superconductor (S/F1/N/F2/S) Josephson junction. Using quasiclassical Green's function method, we show that the magnetization becomes finite inside N. The origin of this magnetization is due to odd-frequency spin-triplet Cooper pairs formed by electrons of equal and opposite spins, which are induced by proximity effect in the S/F1/N/F2/S junction. We find that the magnetization M(d,q) in N can be decomposed into two parts, M(d,q)=MI(d)+MII(d,q), where q is the superconducting phase difference between two Ss and d is the thickness of N. MI(d) exists generally in S/F junctions, while MII(d,q) carries all q dependence and represents the fingerprint of phase coherence between two Ss in Josephson junctions. The q dependence thus allows…
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