Solitonic Josephson-based meminductive systems
Claudio Guarcello, Paolo Solinas, Massimiliano Di Ventra, Francesco, Giazotto

TL;DR
This paper proposes a theoretical superconducting memory device using solitonic long Josephson junctions, which exhibits hysteretic behavior and topological protection, enabling multi-state memory with potential applications in memcomputing and adaptive electronics.
Contribution
It introduces a novel solitonic Josephson-based meminductive system that combines multi-state memory, long retention, and topological protection in a superconducting platform.
Findings
Demonstrates hysteretic behavior of Josephson critical current under magnetic field.
Shows the system can function as a multi-state memory.
Provides intrinsic protection against external perturbations.
Abstract
Memristors, memcapacitors, and meminductors, collectively called memelements, represent an innovative generation of circuit elements whose properties depend on the state and history of the system. The hysteretic behavior of one of their constituent variables, under the effect of an external time-dependent perturbation, is their distinctive fingerprint. In turn, this feature endows them with the ability to both store and process information on the same physical location, a property that is expected to benefit many applications ranging from unconventional computing to adaptive electronics to robotics, to name just a few. For all these types of applications, it is important to find appropriate memelements that combine a wide range of memory states (multi-state memory), long memory retention times, and protection against unavoidable noise. Although several physical systems belong to the…
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