Theory for Spin Selective Andreev Reflection in Vortex Core of Topological Superconductor: Majorana Zero Modes on Spherical Surface and Application to Spin Polarized Scanning Tunneling Microscope Probe
Lun-Hui Hu, Chuang Li, Dong-Hui Xu, Yi Zhou, Fu-Chun Zhang

TL;DR
This paper develops a theoretical framework for understanding spin selective Andreev reflection of Majorana zero modes in vortex cores on spherical surfaces, with implications for spin-polarized STM experiments on topological superconductors.
Contribution
It introduces a model of MZMs on a spherical surface with Rashba spin-orbit coupling, explaining spin-dependent tunneling conductance and applying it to recent experimental data.
Findings
Spin selective Andreev reflection occurs when STM spin polarization aligns with magnetic field.
The model explains experimental spin-polarized tunneling conductance measurements.
Finite size effects lead to hybridization of MZMs at opposite poles.
Abstract
Majorana zero modes (MZMs) have been predicted to exist in the topological insulator (TI)/superconductor (SC) heterostructure. Recent spin polarized scanning tunneling microscope (STM) experiment has observed spin-polarization dependence of the zero bias differential tunneling conductance at the center of vortex core, which may be attributed to the spin selective Andreev reflection, a novel property of the MZMs theoretically predicted in 1-dimensional nanowire. Here we consider a helical electron system described by a Rashba spin orbit coupling Hamiltonian on a spherical surface with a s-wave superconducting pairing due to proximity effect. We examine in-gap excitations of a pair of vortices with one at the north pole and the other at the south pole. While the MZM is not a spin eigenstate, the spin wavefunction of the MZM at the center of the vortex core, r = 0, is parallel…
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