Quasiparticle gaps in multiprobe Majorana nanowires
Yingyi Huang, Jay D. Sau, Tudor D. Stanescu, S. Das Sarma

TL;DR
This paper investigates how multiple tunnel probes affect the detection of Majorana bound states in nanowires, revealing complex behaviors including additional low-energy states that complicate experimental interpretation.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed theoretical analysis of multiprobe Majorana nanowires, highlighting the impact of probe-induced potential fluctuations and barrier details on tunneling spectra.
Findings
Tunneling spectra are highly sensitive to probe barrier details.
Additional low-energy Andreev bound states can mimic Majorana signatures.
Simulations suggest complex quasiparticle gap behaviors in experiments.
Abstract
We theoretically study a spin-orbit-coupled nanowire proximitized by a superconductor in the presence of an externally applied Zeeman field ("Majorana nanowire") with zero-energy Majorana bound states localized at the two ends of the wire when the Zeeman spin splitting is large enough for the system to enter the topological phase. The specific physics of interest in the current work is the effect of having several tunnel probes attached to the wire along its length. Such tunnel probes should allow, as a matter of principle, one to observe both the predicted bulk superconducting gap closing and opening associated with the topological quantum phase transition as well as the Majorana bound states at the wire ends showing up as zero-bias conductance peaks, depending on which probes are used for the tunneling spectroscopy measurement. Because of the possible invasive nature of the tunnel…
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