ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Recent experiments show strong evidences of nematic triplet superconductivity in doped Bi$_2$Se$_3$ and in Bi$_2$Te$_3$ thin film on a superconducting substrate, but with varying identifications of the direction of the $d$-vector of the triplet that is essential to the topology of the underlying superconductivity. Here we show that the $d$-vector can be directly visualized by scanning tunneling measurements: At subgap energies the $d$-vector is along the leading peak wave-vector in the quasi-particle-interference pattern for potential impurities, and counter-intuitively along the elongation of the local density-of-state profile of the vortex. The results provide a useful guide to experiments, the result of which would in turn pose a stringent constraint on the pairing symmetry.
We investigate the states of triplet pairing in a candidate nematic superconductor versus typical material parameters, using the mean field theory for two- and three-dimensional tight-binding models with local triplet pairing in the $E_u$ representat
In this work, we study even-parity spin-singlet orbital-triplet pairing states for a two-band superconductor. An orbital $mathbf{d}_o(mathbf{k})$-vector is introduced to characterize orbital-dependent pairings, in analogy to the spin $mathbf{d}_s(mat
We study a novel type of coupling between spin and orbital degrees of freedom which appears at triplet superconductor-ferromagnet interfaces. Using a self-consistent spatially-dependent mean-field theory, we show that increasing the angle between the
Superconductivity is a quantum phenomenon caused by bound pairs of electrons. In diverse families of strongly correlated electron systems, the electron pairs are not bound together by phonon exchange but instead by some other kind of bosonic fluctuat
Superconductivity in FeSe has recently attracted a great deal of attention because it emerges out of an electronic nematic state of elusive character. Here we study both the electronic normal state and the superconducting gap structure using heat-cap