SUPERCONDUCTORS THAT BREAK TIME-REVERSAL SYMMETRY
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Abstract
Since 2006 it has been discovered experimentally that the
superconducting state spontaneously breaks time-reversal symmetry
(TRS) in several materials, such as Sr2RuO4, UPt3, URu2Si2, PrOs4Sb12,
and Bi/Ni bilayers. This dissertation studies three physical phenomena
related to time-reversal symmetry breaking (TRSB) in these
superconductors.
The experimental evidence for TRSB comes from the magneto-optical
polar Kerr effect, which is determined by the high frequency ac Hall
conductivity. However, these superconductors are also expected to
exhibit a spontaneous dc Hall effect in the absence of an applied
magnetic field. In the first part of this dissertation we propose a
method for measuring the low frequency Hall conductivity in
superconductors with TRSB. The method is based on a Corbino disk
geometry where an oscillating co-axial magnetic field induces circular
electric field, which, in turn, induces radial charge oscillations due
to the Hall conductivity.
In the second part, we propose an explanation for the polar Kerr
effect observed in the Hidden-Order phase of the heavy-fermion
superconductor URu2Si2. Using a Ginzburg-Landau model for a complex
order parameter, we show that the system can have a metastable
ferromagnetic state, which produces the Kerr signal, even if the
Hidden-Order state respects TRS. We predict that applying a reversed
magnetic field should reset the system to the non-magnetic ground
state, resulting in zero Kerr signal.
In the third part of the dissertation, we investigate the conditions
for the existence of a Majorana bound state on a vortex in a 2D d+id
superconductor with strong spin-orbit coupling. This TRSB pairing was
proposed earlier for the Ni/Bi bilayer. We find that the Majorana
bound state can exist for a d+id pairing under conditions similar to
those for s-wave pairing.