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Open Quantum Systems Decoherence
Quantum Simulation
Superconducting Qubits
Emergence of exceptional points and their spectroscopic signature in Dirac semimetal-dirty Superconductor heterojunction
arXiv
Authors: Sayan Jana, Debashree Chowdhury, Arijit Saha
Year
2020
Paper ID
20167
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
154
Citations
N/A
Abstract
We theoretically investigate the emergence of non-hermitian physics at the heterojunction of a type-II Dirac semi-metal (DSM) and a dirty superconductor (DSC). The non-hermiticity is introduced in the DSM through the self-energy term incorporated via the dirtiness of the superconducting material. This causes the spectra of the effective Hamiltonian to become complex, which gives rise to the appearance of the exceptional points (EPs). This complex self energy, apart from having a frequency dependence, also acquires spatial dependence as well, which is unique and can provide interesting effects related to non-hermitian physics in spectral function analysis. At an appropriate distance from the normal metal-superconductor junction of the DSC, non-hermitian degeneracies appear and a single Dirac point splits into two EPs. In the spectral function analysis, apart from the EPs, a Fermi-arc like structure also emerges, which connects the two degeneracies (EPs). The results discussed here are distinctive and possibly can be realized in spectroscopy measurements.
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- This paper contributes to the Quantum Simulation research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
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- We theoretically investigate the emergence of non-hermitian physics at the heterojunction of a type-II Dirac semi-metal (DSM) and a dirty superconductor (DSC).
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