NobleBlocks

Microsoft (Denmark)

companyCopenhagen, Denmark

Research output, citation impact, and the most-cited recent papers from Microsoft (Denmark) (Denmark). Aggregated across the NobleBlocks index of 300M+ scholarly works.

Total works
134
Citations
14.7K
h-index
60
i10-index
266
Also known as
Microsoft (Denmark)

Top-cited papers from Microsoft (Denmark)

Flux-induced topological superconductivity in full-shell nanowires
S. Vaitiekėnas, G. W. Winkler, B. van Heck, T. Karzig +4 more
2020· Science188doi:10.1126/science.aav3392

Hybrid semiconductor-superconductor nanowires have emerged as a promising platform for realizing topological superconductivity (TSC). Here, we present a route to TSC using magnetic flux applied to a full superconducting shell surrounding a semiconducting nanowire core. Tunneling into the core reveals a hard induced gap near zero applied flux, corresponding to zero phase winding, and a gapped region with a discrete zero-energy state around one applied flux quantum, corresponding to 2π phase winding. Theoretical analysis indicates that the winding of the superconducting phase can induce a transition to a topological phase supporting Majorana zero modes. Measured Coulomb blockade peak spacing around one flux quantum shows a length dependence that is consistent with the existence of Majorana modes at the ends of the nanowire.

LocText: relation extraction of protein localizations to assist database curation
Juan Miguel Cejuela, Shrikant Vinchurkar, Tatyana Goldberg, Madhukar Sollepura Prabhu Shankar +4 more
2018· BMC Bioinformatics177doi:10.1186/s12859-018-2021-9

BACKGROUND: The subcellular localization of a protein is an important aspect of its function. However, the experimental annotation of locations is not even complete for well-studied model organisms. Text mining might aid database curators to add experimental annotations from the scientific literature. Existing extraction methods have difficulties to distinguish relationships between proteins and cellular locations co-mentioned in the same sentence. RESULTS: LocText was created as a new method to extract protein locations from abstracts and full texts. LocText learned patterns from syntax parse trees and was trained and evaluated on a newly improved LocTextCorpus. Combined with an automatic named-entity recognizer, LocText achieved high precision (P = 86%±4). After completing development, we mined the latest research publications for three organisms: human (Homo sapiens), budding yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae), and thale cress (Arabidopsis thaliana). Examining 60 novel, text-mined annotations, we found that 65% (human), 85% (yeast), and 80% (cress) were correct. Of all validated annotations, 40% were completely novel, i.e. did neither appear in the annotations nor the text descriptions of Swiss-Prot. CONCLUSIONS: LocText provides a cost-effective, semi-automated workflow to assist database curators in identifying novel protein localization annotations. The annotations suggested through text-mining would be verified by experts to guarantee high-quality standards of manually-curated databases such as Swiss-Prot.

Nontopological zero-bias peaks in full-shell nanowires induced by flux-tunable Andreev states
Marco Valentini, Fernando Peñaranda, Andrea Hofmann, Matthias Brauns +4 more
2021· Science133doi:10.1126/science.abf1513

A semiconducting nanowire fully wrapped by a superconducting shell has been proposed as a platform for obtaining Majorana modes at small magnetic fields. In this study, we demonstrate that the appearance of subgap states in such structures is actually governed by the junction region in tunneling spectroscopy measurements and not the full-shell nanowire itself. Short tunneling regions never show subgap states, whereas longer junctions always do. This can be understood in terms of quantum dots forming in the junction and hosting Andreev levels in the Yu-Shiba-Rusinov regime. The intricate magnetic field dependence of the Andreev levels, through both the Zeeman and Little-Parks effects, may result in robust zero-bias peaks-features that could be easily misinterpreted as originating from Majorana zero modes but are unrelated to topological superconductivity.

Conductance-Matrix Symmetries of a Three-Terminal Hybrid Device
Gerbold C. Ménard, Gian-Luca Anselmetti, Esteban A. Martinez, Denise Puglia +4 more
2020· Physical Review Letters111doi:10.1103/physrevlett.124.036802

We present conductance-matrix measurements of a three-terminal superconductor-semiconductor hybrid device consisting of two normal leads and one superconducting lead. Using a symmetry decomposition of the conductance, we find that antisymmetric components of pairs of local and nonlocal conductances qualitatively match at energies below the superconducting gap, and we compare this finding with symmetry relations based on a noninteracting scattering matrix approach. Further, the local charge character of Andreev bound states is extracted from the symmetry-decomposed conductance data and is found to be similar at both ends of the device and tunable with gate voltage. Finally, we measure the conductance matrix as a function of magnetic field and identify correlated splittings in low-energy features, demonstrating how conductance-matrix measurements can complement traditional single-probe measurements in the search for Majorana zero modes.

Nonlocal Conductance Spectroscopy of Andreev Bound States: Symmetry Relations and BCS Charges
Jeroen Danon, Anna Birk Hellenes, Esben Bork Hansen, Lucas Casparis +2 more
2020· Physical Review Letters105doi:10.1103/physrevlett.124.036801

Two-terminal conductance spectroscopy of superconducting devices is a common tool for probing Andreev and Majorana bound states. Here, we study theoretically a three-terminal setup, with two normal leads coupled to a grounded superconducting terminal. Using a single-electron scattering matrix, we derive the subgap conductance matrix for the normal leads and discuss its symmetries. In particular, we show that the local and the nonlocal elements of the conductance matrix have pairwise identical antisymmetric components. Moreover, we find that the nonlocal elements are directly related to the local BCS charges of the bound states close to the normal probes and we show how the BCS charge of overlapping Majorana bound states can be extracted from experiments.

Parity-Protected Superconductor-Semiconductor Qubit
T. W. Larsen, M. E. Gershenson, Lucas Casparis, Anders Kringhøj +4 more
2020· Physical Review Letters105doi:10.1103/physrevlett.125.056801

Coherence of superconducting qubits can be improved by implementing designs that protect the parity of Cooper pairs on superconducting islands. Here, we introduce a parity-protected qubit based on voltage-controlled semiconductor nanowire Josephson junctions, taking advantage of the higher harmonic content in the energy-phase relation of few-channel junctions. A symmetric interferometer formed by two such junctions, gate-tuned into balance and frustrated by a half-quantum of applied flux, yields a cos(2φ) Josephson element, reflecting coherent transport of pairs of Cooper pairs. We demonstrate that relaxation of the qubit can be suppressed tenfold by tuning into the protected regime.

Relating Andreev Bound States and Supercurrents in Hybrid Josephson Junctions
Fabrizio Nichele, Elías Portolés, Antonio Fornieri, Alexander Whiticar +4 more
2020· Physical Review Letters99doi:10.1103/physrevlett.124.226801

We demonstrate concomitant measurement of phase-dependent critical current and Andreev bound state spectrum in a highly transmissive InAs Josephson junction embedded in a dc superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID). Tunneling spectroscopy reveals Andreev bound states with near unity transmission probability. A nonsinusoidal current-phase relation is derived from the Andreev spectrum, showing excellent agreement with the one extracted from the SQUID critical current. Both measurements are reconciled within a short junction model where multiple Andreev bound states, with various transmission probabilities, contribute to the entire supercurrent flowing in the junction.

Semiconductor–Ferromagnetic Insulator–Superconductor Nanowires: Stray Field and Exchange Field
Yu Liu, S. Vaitiekėnas, Sara Martí‐Sánchez, Christian Koch +4 more
2019· Nano Letters76doi:10.1021/acs.nanolett.9b04187

Nanowires can serve as flexible substrates for hybrid epitaxial growth on selected facets, allowing for the design of heterostructures with complex material combinations and geometries. In this work we report on hybrid epitaxy of freestanding vapor-liquid-solid grown and in-plane selective area grown semiconductor-ferromagnetic insulator-superconductor (InAs/EuS/Al) nanowire heterostructures. We study the crystal growth and complex epitaxial matching of wurtzite and zinc-blende InAs/rock-salt EuS interfaces as well as rock-salt EuS/face-centered cubic Al interfaces. Because of the magnetic anisotropy originating from the nanowire shape, the magnetic structure of the EuS phase is easily tuned into single magnetic domains. This effect efficiently ejects the stray field lines along the nanowires. With tunnel spectroscopy measurements of the density of states, we show that the material has a hard induced superconducting gap, and magnetic hysteretic evolution which indicates that the magnetic exchange fields are not negligible. These hybrid nanowires fulfill key material requirements for serving as a platform for spin-based quantum applications, such as scalable topological quantum computing.

Selective-area chemical beam epitaxy of in-plane InAs one-dimensional channels grown on InP(001), InP(111)B, and InP(011) surfaces
Joon Sue Lee, Sukgeun Choi, Mihir Pendharkar, Daniel J. Pennachio +4 more
2019· Physical Review Materials69doi:10.1103/physrevmaterials.3.084606

One-dimensional semiconductors with strong spin-orbit coupling have recently gained much attention in the fields of Majorana zero modes and topological quantum computing. The current focus lies on realizing braiding and topological qubits, which require complex nanowire (NW) networks. The authors investigate selective-area growth of in-plane semiconductor NWs for building wafer-scale NW networks. They extensively studied the growth conditions as well as the structural and electrical properties of InAs NWs grown on InP(001), InP(111)B, and InP(110) substrates by chemical beam epitaxy. Low-temperature electrical transport studies suggest that these material systems are suitable for realization of NW networks for topological quantum computing.

Supercurrent in a Double Quantum Dot
Juan Carlos Estrada Saldaña, Alexandros Vekris, Gorm O. Steffensen, Rok Žitko +4 more
2018· Physical Review Letters66doi:10.1103/physrevlett.121.257701

We demonstrate the Josephson effect in a serial double quantum dot defined in a nanowire with epitaxial superconducting leads. The supercurrent stability diagram adopts a honeycomb pattern. We observe sharp discontinuities in the magnitude of the critical current, I_{c}, as a function of dot occupation, related to doublet to singlet ground state transitions. Detuning of the energy levels offers a tuning knob for I_{c}, which attains a maximum at zero detuning. The consistency between experiment and theory indicates that our device is a faithful realization of the two-impurity Anderson model.

Object and native code thread mobility among heterogeneous computers (includes sources)
Bjarne Steensgaard, Eric Jul
199561doi:10.1145/224056.224063

We present a technique for moving objects and threads among heterogeneous computers at the native code level. To enable mobility of threads running native code, we convert thread states among machine-dependent and machine-independent formats. We introduce the concept of bLts stops, which are machine-independent representations of program points as represented by program counter values, The concept of bus stops can be used also for other purposes, <~. g., to aid inspecting and debugging optimized code, garbage collection e~c. We also discuss techniques for thread mobility among processors executing differently optimized codes.

Coherent transport through a Majorana island in an Aharonov–Bohm interferometer
Alexander Whiticar, Antonio Fornieri, Eoin O’Farrell, A. C. C. Drachmann +4 more
2020· Nature Communications60doi:10.1038/s41467-020-16988-x

Majorana zero modes are leading candidates for topological quantum computation due to non-local qubit encoding and non-abelian exchange statistics. Spatially separated Majorana modes are expected to allow phase-coherent single-electron transport through a topological superconducting island via a mechanism referred to as teleportation. Here we experimentally investigate such a system by patterning an elongated epitaxial InAs-Al island embedded in an Aharonov-Bohm interferometer. With increasing parallel magnetic field, a discrete sub-gap state in the island is lowered to zero energy yielding persistent 1e-periodic Coulomb blockade conductance peaks (e is the elementary charge). In this condition, conductance through the interferometer is observed to oscillate in a perpendicular magnetic field with a flux period of h/e (h is Planck's constant), indicating coherent transport of single electrons through the islands, a signature of electron teleportation via Majorana modes.

Closing of the induced gap in a hybrid superconductor-semiconductor nanowire
Denise Puglia, Esteban A. Martinez, Gerbold C. Ménard, Andreas Pöschl +4 more
2021· Physical review. B./Physical review. B57doi:10.1103/physrevb.103.235201

Conclusively identifying Majorana modes in nanowires is an long-standing experimental challenge. Within the field, consensus is emerging that achieving this goal will require measurements on three-terminal devices. Here, the authors report some of the first results on such devices using nonlocal conductance. They find that zero-bias peaks are preceded by the closure of the bulk gap, which indicates that in these devices zero-bias peaks are associated with bulk properties of the nanowire. However, the behavior of the device after gap closure suggests that disorder remains an important limitation.

Digital Twin-Enabled Intelligent DDoS Detection Mechanism for Autonomous Core Networks
Yagmur Yigit, Bahadir Bal, Aytac Karameseoglu, Trung Q. Duong +1 more
2022· IEEE Communications Standards Magazine52doi:10.1109/mcomstd.0001.2100022

Existing distributed denial of service attack (DDoS) solutions cannot handle highly aggregated data rates; thus, they are unsuitable for Internet service provider (ISP) core networks. This article proposes a digital twin-enabled intelligent DDoS detection mechanism using an online learning method for autonomous systems. Our contributions are three-fold: we first design a DDoS detection architecture based on the digital twin for ISP core networks. We implemented a Yet Another Next Generation (YANG) model and an automated feature selection (AutoFS) module to handle core network data. We used an online learning approach to update the model instantly and efficiently, improve the learning model quickly, and ensure accurate predictions. Finally, we reveal that our proposed solution successfully detects DDoS attacks and updates the feature selection method and learning model with a true classification rate of ninety-seven percent. Our proposed solution can estimate the attack within approximately fifteen minutes after the DDoS attack starts.

Quantum Dot Parity Effects in Trivial and Topological Josephson Junctions
Davydas Razmadze, Eoin O’Farrell, Peter Krogstrup, C. M. Marcus
2020· Physical Review Letters51doi:10.1103/physrevlett.125.116803

An odd-occupied quantum dot in a Josephson junction can flip transmission phase, creating a π junction. When the junction couples topological superconductors, no phase flip is expected. We investigate this and related effects in a full-shell hybrid interferometer, using gate voltage to control dot-junction parity and axial magnetic flux to control the transition from trivial to topological superconductivity. Enhanced zero-bias conductance and critical current for odd parity in the topological phase reflects hybridization of the confined spin with zero-energy modes in the leads.

Suppressed Charge Dispersion via Resonant Tunneling in a Single-Channel Transmon
Anders Kringhøj, Bernard van Heck, T. W. Larsen, Oscar Erlandsson +4 more
2020· Physical Review Letters51doi:10.1103/physrevlett.124.246803

We demonstrate strong suppression of charge dispersion in a semiconductor-based transmon qubit across Josephson resonances associated with a quantum dot in the junction. On resonance, dispersion is drastically reduced compared to conventional transmons with corresponding Josephson and charging energies. We develop a model of qubit dispersion for a single-channel resonance, which is in quantitative agreement with experimental data.

Observation of Vanishing Charge Dispersion of a Nearly Open Superconducting Island
Arno Bargerbos, Willemijn Uilhoorn, Chung-Kai Yang, Peter Krogstrup +4 more
2020· Physical Review Letters50doi:10.1103/physrevlett.124.246802

Isolation from the environment determines the extent to which charge is confined on an island, which manifests as Coulomb oscillations, such as charge dispersion. We investigate the charge dispersion of a nanowire transmon hosting a quantum dot in the junction. We observe rapid suppression of the charge dispersion with increasing junction transparency, consistent with the predicted scaling law, which incorporates two branches of the Josephson potential. We find improved qubit coherence times at the point of highest suppression, suggesting novel approaches for building charge-insensitive qubits.

Gate-Tunable Field-Compatible Fluxonium
Marta Pita‐Vidal, Arno Bargerbos, Chung-Kai Yang, David J. van Woerkom +4 more
2020· Physical Review Applied48doi:10.1103/physrevapplied.14.064038

Hybrid superconducting circuits have been used to investigate mesoscopic superconductivity, but mostly just at low magnetic fields, as typical Al-based circuits are incompatible with magnetic fields, and superconducting circuits are sensitive to external magnetic flux noise. To overcome these challenges, the authors build a hybrid fluxonium system composed of (Nb,Ti)N, with a gradiometric design. They observe the spectrum of the hybrid fluxonium in fields of up to 1T, and probe the ${\ensuremath{\phi}}_{0}$ Josephson effect. These results enable future exploration of topological superconductivity, as well as readout of long-lifetime spin-polarized qubits using superconducting circuitry.

End-to-end correlated subgap states in hybrid nanowires
Gian-Luca Anselmetti, Esteban A. Martinez, Gerbold C. Ménard, Denise Puglia +4 more
2019· Physical review. B./Physical review. B47doi:10.1103/physrevb.100.205412

End-to-end correlated bound states are investigated in superconductor-semiconductor hybrid nanowires at zero magnetic field. Peaks in subgap conductance are independently identified from each wire end, and a cross-correlation function is computed that counts end-to-end coincidences, averaging over thousands of subgap features. Strong correlations in a short, 300-nm device are reduced by a factor of 4 in a long, 900-nm device. In addition, subgap conductance distributions are investigated, and correlations between the left and right distributions are identified based on their mutual information.

Highly Transparent Gatable Superconducting Shadow Junctions
Sabbir A. Khan, Charalampos Lampadaris, Ajuan Cui, Lukas Stampfer +4 more
2020· ACS Nano45doi:10.1021/acsnano.0c02979

Gate-tunable junctions are key elements in quantum devices based on hybrid semiconductor–superconductor materials. They serve multiple purposes ranging from tunnel spectroscopy probes to voltage-controlled qubit operations in gatemon and topological qubits. Common to all is that junction transparency plays a critical role. In this study, we grow single-crystalline InAs, InSb, and InAs1–xSbx semiconductor nanowires with epitaxial Al, Sn, and Pb superconductors and in situ shadowed junctions in a single-step molecular beam epitaxy process. We investigate correlations between fabrication parameters, junction morphologies, and electronic transport properties of the junctions and show that the examined in situ shadowed junctions are of significantly higher quality than the etched junctions. By varying the edge sharpness of the shadow junctions, we show that the sharpest edges yield the highest junction transparency for all three examined semiconductors. Further, critical supercurrent measurements reveal an extraordinarily high ICRN, close to the KO-2 limit. This study demonstrates a promising engineering path toward reliable gate-tunable superconducting qubits.