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      Fragmentation of Fast Josephson Vortices and Breakdown of Ordered States by Moving Topological Defects

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      a , 1 , b , 1
      Scientific Reports
      Nature Publishing Group

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          Abstract

          Topological defects such as vortices, dislocations or domain walls define many important effects in superconductivity, superfluidity, magnetism, liquid crystals, and plasticity of solids. Here we address the breakdown of the topologically-protected stability of such defects driven by strong external forces. We focus on Josephson vortices that appear at planar weak links of suppressed superconductivity which have attracted much attention for electronic applications, new sources of THz radiation, and low-dissipative computing. Our numerical simulations show that a rapidly moving vortex driven by a constant current becomes unstable with respect to generation of vortex-antivortex pairs caused by Cherenkov radiation. As a result, vortices and antivortices become spatially separated and accumulate continuously on the opposite sides of an expanding dissipative domain. This effect is most pronounced in thin film edge Josephson junctions at low temperatures where a single vortex can switch the whole junction into a resistive state at currents well below the Josephson critical current. Our work gives a new insight into instability of a moving topological defect which destroys global long-range order in a way that is remarkably similar to the crack propagation in solids.

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          Superconducting circuits for quantum information: an outlook.

          The performance of superconducting qubits has improved by several orders of magnitude in the past decade. These circuits benefit from the robustness of superconductivity and the Josephson effect, and at present they have not encountered any hard physical limits. However, building an error-corrected information processor with many such qubits will require solving specific architecture problems that constitute a new field of research. For the first time, physicists will have to master quantum error correction to design and operate complex active systems that are dissipative in nature, yet remain coherent indefinitely. We offer a view on some directions for the field and speculate on its future.
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            Dynamics of sine-Gordon solitons in the annular Josephson junction

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              Is Open Access

              Flux flow of Abrikosov-Josephson vortices along grain boundaries in high-temperature superconductors

              We show that low-angle grain boundaries (GB) in high-temperature superconductors exhibit intermediate Abrikosov vortices with Josephson cores, whose length \(l\) along GB is smaller that the London penetration depth, but larger than the coherence length. We found an exact solution for a periodic vortex structure moving along GB in a magnetic field \(H\) and calculated the flux flow resistivity \(R_F(H)\), and the nonlinear voltage-current characteristics. The predicted \(R_F(H)\) dependence describes well our experimental data on \(7^{\circ}\) unirradiated and irradiated \(YBa_2Cu_3O_7\) bicrystals, from which the core size \(l(T)\), and the intrinsic depairing density \(J_b(T)\) on nanoscales of few GB dislocations were measured for the first time. The observed temperature dependence of \(J_b(T)=J_{b0}(1-T/T_c)^2\) indicates a significant order parameter suppression in current channels between GB dislocation cores.

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Sci Rep
                Sci Rep
                Scientific Reports
                Nature Publishing Group
                2045-2322
                07 December 2015
                2015
                : 5
                : 17821
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Physics and the Center for Accelerator Science, Old Dominion University , Norfolk, VA 23529, USA
                Author notes
                Article
                srep17821
                10.1038/srep17821
                4671065
                26639165
                ff31ce0d-5f88-4a39-849e-b033b9e21cbe
                Copyright © 2015, Macmillan Publishers Limited

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

                History
                : 25 September 2015
                : 06 November 2015
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