Condensed Matter Seminar Series
Cooper Pair Mediated Coherence Between Two Normal Metals
Venkat Chandrasekhar
Northwestern University
Thursday May 19, 11:00 am, Room 298, Physics Building
Abstract: Two
electrons bound in a singlet state have long provided a conceptual and
pedagogical framework for understanding the nonlocal nature of
entangled quantum objects. As bound singlet electrons separated by a
coherence length of up to several hundred nanometers occur naturally in
conventional BCS superconductors in the form of Cooper pairs, recent
theoretical investigations have focused on whether electrons in
spatially separated normal metal probes placed within a coherence
length of each other on a superconductor can be quantum mechanically
coupled by the singlet pairs. This coupling is predicted to occur
through the nonlocal processes of elastic cotunneling (EC) and crossed
Andreev reflection (CAR). In CAR, the constituent electrons of a Cooper
pair are sent into different normal probes while retaining their mutual
coherence. In EC, a sub-gap electron approaching the superconductor
from one normal probe undergoes coherent, long-range tunneling to the
second probe that is mediated by the Cooper pairs in the condensate. We
present here experimental evidence for coherent, nonlocal coupling
between electrons in two normal metals linked by a superconductor. The
coupling is observed in nonlocal resistance oscillations that are
periodic in an externally applied magnetic flux, as well as in
cross-correlation noise experiments. (In collaboration with Paul
Cadden-Zimansky and Jian Wei.
Host: Harold Baranger