The Anderson-Josephson quantum dot -- A theory perspective
V. Meden

TL;DR
This paper reviews the theoretical understanding of the Anderson-Josephson quantum dot, focusing on the Josephson current, phase transitions, and comparisons with experiments, while exploring complex geometries involving Fano effects and spin states.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive theoretical analysis of the Anderson-Josephson quantum dot, including model validation against experiments and exploration of complex geometries with potential experimental realization.
Findings
Quantitative agreement between model predictions and experimental measurements of Josephson current.
Identification of a first order level-crossing quantum phase transition affecting the Josephson current.
Insights into complex dot geometries involving Fano effects and spin state degeneracies.
Abstract
Recent progress in nanoscale manufacturing allowed to experimentally investigate quantum dots coupled to two superconducting leads in controlled and tunable setups. The equilibrium Josephson current was measured in on-chip SQUID devices and subgap states were investigated using weakly coupled metallic leads for spectroscopy. This put back two "classic" problems also on the agenda of theoretical condensed matter physics: the Josephson effect and quantum spins in superconductors. We discuss the status of the theoretical understanding of the Anderson-Josephson quantum dot in equilibrium mainly focusing on the Josephson current. We introduce a minimal model consisting of a dot which can only host one spin-up and one spin-down electron repelling each other by a local Coulomb interaction. The dot is tunnel-coupled to two superconducting leads described by the BCS Hamiltonian. This model was…
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