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Dryad

Signature of a pair of Majorana zero modes in superconducting gold surface states

Abstract

Under certain conditions, a fermion in a superconductor can separate in space into two parts known as Majorana zero modes, which are immune to decoherence from local noise sources and are attractive building blocks for quantum computers. Promising experimental progress has been made to demonstrate Majorana zero modes in materials with strong spin-orbit coupling proximity coupled to superconductors. Here we show direct evidence of the split Majorana pair in a new material platform utilizing the two-dimensional surface states of gold, which is intrinsically scalable for building the complex nanowire circuits for topological qubits. Using scanning tunneling microscope to probe EuS islands grown on top of gold nanowires, we confirm the Majorana pair by demonstrating two spatially well separated zero bias tunneling conductance peaks aligned along the direction of the applied magnetic field. Our work opens the door towards scalable and robust Majorana based topological qubits.