Key Highlights
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A study on aluminum/tungsten ditelluride (Al/WTe2) Josephson junctions suggests that the common absence of the first “Shapiro step” in experiments may not be a definitive sign of exotic Majorana particles. This finding is crucial because it highlights a more mundane, intrinsic property of the junctions that could explain the result, urging caution in interpreting such data as evidence for Majorana-based quantum computing.
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Researchers found that the missing first Shapiro step can arise from the natural non-linear electrical behavior of junctions with low-to-moderate transparency. This means a key experimental signature thought to point toward revolutionary quantum states might have a simpler, more conventional explanation, which could redirect research efforts in the field.
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