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The possible realization of Majorana fermions as quasiparticle excitations in condensed matter physics has created much excitement. Most recent studies have focused on Majorana bound states which can serve as topological qubits. More generally, akin to elementary particles, Majorana fermions can propagate and display linear dispersion. These excitations have not yet been directly observed, and can also be used for quantum information processing. One route to realizing this is in a line junction between two phase-shifted superconductors coupled to topological surface states. Recent theory indicates that in iron-based superconductors, a particular type of crystalline defect, i.e., a domain wall (DW) between two regions with a half-unit cell shift between them, should create a $pi$-phase shift in the superconducting order parameter. Combined with recent data showing topological surface states in FeSe$_x$Te$_{1-x}$ we find that this is the ideal system to realize helical 1D-dispersing Majorana modes. Here we report scanning tunneling spectroscopic (STS) measurements of crystalline DWs in FeSe$_{0.45}$Te$_{0.55}$. By analyzing large-area superconducting gap maps, we identify the gap in the topological surface state, demonstrating that our sample is an effective Fu-Kane proximitized topological system. We further locate DWs across which the atoms shift by half a unit cell. STS data on these DWs reveal a flat density of states inside the superconducting gap, a hallmark of linearly dispersing modes in 1D. This unique signature is absent in DWs in the related superconductor, FeSe which is not in the topological phase. Our combined data are consistent with the observation of dispersing Majorana states at a $pi$-phase shift DW in a proximitized topological material.
The search for Majorana bound state (MBS) has recently emerged as one of the most active research areas in condensed matter physics, fueled by the prospect of using its non-Abelian statistics for robust quantum computation. A highly sought-after plat
Braiding Majorana zero modes is essential for fault-tolerant topological quantum computing. Iron-based superconductors with nontrivial band topology have recently emerged as a surprisingly promising platform for creating distinct Majorana zero modes
Among the mysteries surrounding unconventional, strongly correlated superconductors is the possibility of spatial variations in their superfluid density. We use atomic-resolution Josephson scanning tunneling microscopy to reveal a strongly inhomogene
A theory of superconductivity in the iron-based materials requires an understanding of the phase diagram of the normal state. In these compounds, superconductivity emerges when stripe spin density wave (SDW) order is suppressed by doping, pressure or
Recent experiment reported the evidence of dispersing one-dimensional Majorana mode trapped by the crystalline domain walls in FeSe0.45Te0.55. Here, we perform the first-principles calculationsto show that iron atoms in the domain wall spontaneously