Abstract

Proximity-coupled nanostructures of conventional superconductors (SCs) and half-metallic ferromagnets (hmFs) are promising candidates as materials with unconventional superconductivity. The interrelated superposition of spin singlet-triplet and frequency even-odd superconducting condensates characterizes the superconducting state in such heterostructures. In a multi-band SC, the collective modes associated with the excitations of the relative phase between superconducting bands without perturbation of the Cooper pairs symmetry (Leggett modes) are allowed. In this report, we present the results of experimental investigations via the point-contact transport measurements of the Leggett-like collective excitations in the superconducting state of the nanocomposite of s-wave two-band superconductor MgB2 and half-metallic ferromagnet (La,Sr)MnO3. Two types of point contacts (PCs) have been used: the nanocomposite-nonmagnetic metal PCs and the nanocomposite–hmF PCs. The conductance equidistant peaks against the background of the gap structure were observed in both types of high-quality point junctions. Their distinctive feature was their period: two times shorter for the nanocomposite–hmF contacts compared to the nonmagnetic metal PCs. We attribute these spin-selective conductance periodic peaks to the relative phase Leggett’s excitations between “parents” MgB2 even-frequency singlet condensates and proximity-induced triplet superconducting condensates. The data obtained on the hmF PCs also demonstrate the features that may indicate a dynamic coupling between even-frequency condensates and odd-frequency gapless superconducting condensates.

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