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Double quantum dot nanostructures embedded between two superconducting leads or in a superconducting ring have complex excitation spectra inside the gap which reveal the competition between different many-body phenomena. We study the corresponding two-impurity Anderson model using the non-perturbative numerical renormalization group (NRG) technique and identify the characteristic features in the spectral function in various parameter regimes. At half-filling, the system always has a singlet ground state. For large hybridization, we observe an inversion of excited inter-dot triplet and singlet states due to the level-repulsion between two sub-gap singlet states. The Shiba doublet states split in two cases: a) at non-zero superconducting phase difference and b) away from half-filling. The most complex structure of sub-gap states is found when one or both dots are in the valence fluctuation regime. Doublet splitting can lead to a parity-changing quantum phase transition to a doublet ground state in some circumstances. In such cases, we observe very different spectral weights for the transitions to singlet or triplet excited Shiba states: the triplet state is best visible on the valence-fluctuating dot, while the singlets are more pronounced on the half-filled dot.
Quantum dots are gate-defined within InSb nanowires, in proximity to NbTiN superconducting contacts. As the coupling between the dot and the superconductor is increased, the odd-parity occupations become non-discernible (erased) both above and below
Quantum dots are nanostructures made of semiconducting materials that are engineered to hold a small amount of electric charge (a few electrons) that is controlled by external gate and may hence be considered as tunable artificial atoms. A quantum do
We demonstrate room temperature visible wavelength photoluminescence from In0.5Ga0.5As quantum dots embedded in a GaP membrane. Time-resolved above band photoluminescence measurements of quantum dot emission show a biexpontential decay with lifetimes
We study spin-resolved noise in Coulomb blockaded double quantum dots coupled to ferromagnetic electrodes. The modulation of the interdot coupling and spin polarization in the electrodes gives rise to an intriguing dynamical spin $uparrow$-$uparrow$
We theoretically investigate the behavior of Andreev levels in a single-orbital interacting quantum dot in contact to superconducting leads, focusing on the effect of electrostatic gating and applied magnetic field, as relevant for recent experimenta