The interplay of superconductivity with non-trivial spin textures is promising for the engineering of non-Abelian Majorana quasiparticles. Spin–orbit coupling is crucial for the topological protection of Majorana modes as it… Click to show full abstract
The interplay of superconductivity with non-trivial spin textures is promising for the engineering of non-Abelian Majorana quasiparticles. Spin–orbit coupling is crucial for the topological protection of Majorana modes as it forbids other trivial excitations at low energy but is typically intrinsic to the material1–7. Here, we show that coupling to a magnetic texture can induce both a strong spin–orbit coupling of 1.1 meV and a Zeeman effect in a carbon nanotube. Both of these features are revealed through oscillations of superconductivity-induced subgap states under a change in the magnetic texture. Furthermore, we find a robust zero-energy state—the hallmark of devices hosting localized Majorana modes—at zero magnetic field. Our findings are generalizable to any low-dimensional conductor, and future work could include microwave spectroscopy and braiding operations, which are at the heart of modern schemes for topological quantum computation. A magnetic texture is used to synthetically induce a large spin–orbit interaction in a carbon nanotube, and signatures of Majorana zero modes—promising for quantum computing applications—are observed.
               
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