Electron temperature and tunnel coupling dependence of zero-bias and almost-zero-bias conductance peaks in Majorana nanowires
F. Setiawan, Chun-Xiao Liu, Jay D. Sau, S. Das Sarma

TL;DR
This paper investigates how temperature and tunnel coupling affect zero-bias conductance peaks in Majorana nanowires, revealing complex dependencies and challenges in distinguishing topological Majorana modes from nontopological states.
Contribution
It provides a detailed theoretical analysis of the temperature and tunnel coupling effects on conductance peaks, highlighting the complexity and limitations of simple scaling relations.
Findings
Full conductance dependence on temperature and tunneling does not follow simple scaling.
A specific scaling relation exists only in the weak-tunneling, low-temperature limit.
Nontopological Andreev bound states can mimic Majorana zero-bias peaks with similar dependencies.
Abstract
A one-dimensional semiconductor nanowire proximitized by a nearby superconductor may become a topological superconductor hosting localized Majorana zero modes at the two wire ends in the presence of spin-orbit coupling and Zeeman spin splitting (arising from an external magnetic field). The hallmark of the presence of such Majorana zero modes is the appearance of a zero-temperature quantized zero-bias conductance peak in the tunneling spectroscopy of the Majorana nanowire. We theoretically study the temperature and the tunnel coupling dependence of the tunneling conductance in such nanowires to understand possible intrinsic deviations from the predicted conductance quantization. We find that the full temperature and the tunneling transmission dependence of the tunnel conductance does not obey any simple scaling relation, and estimating the zero-temperature conductance from…
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