Possible evidence for spin-transfer torque induced by spin-triplet supercurrent
Lailai Li, Yuelei Zhao, Xixiang Zhang, and Young Sun

TL;DR
This paper provides experimental evidence suggesting that spin-triplet supercurrents in superconductor-ferromagnet Josephson junctions can induce spin-transfer torques, confirmed by shifts in ferromagnetic resonance fields below the superconducting transition temperature.
Contribution
It demonstrates possible direct evidence of spin-transfer torques caused by triplet supercurrents, advancing superconducting spintronics understanding.
Findings
FMR field shifts to lower values below T_c in S/F/S junctions
No FMR shift observed in F/S bilayers or S/I/F/S multilayers
Results align with theoretical predictions for ferromagnetic Josephson junctions
Abstract
Cooper pairs in superconductors are normally spin singlet. Nevertheless, recent studies suggest that spin-triplet Cooper pairs can be created at carefully engineered superconductor-ferromagnet interfaces. If Cooper pairs are spin-polarized they would transport not only charge but also a net spin component, but without dissipation, and therefore minimize the heating effects associated with spintronic devices. Although it is now established that triplet supercurrents exist, their most interesting property - spin - is only inferred indirectly from transport measurements. In conventional spintronics, it is well known that spin currents generate spin-transfer torques that alter magnetization dynamics and switch magnetic moments. The observation of similar effects due to spin-triplet supercurrents would not only confirm the net spin of triplet pairs but also pave the way for applications of…
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