Abstract

Thermodynamic fluctuations limit the ultimate performance of superconducting devices of practical interest, devices such as the quantum interference magnetometer and the Josephson junction radiation detector. We report direct observations of thermodynamically driven quantum phase fluctuations near the superconducting critical temperature. The experiments used point-contact quantum interference techniques with niobium points on a single-crystal tin substrate. Near the superconducting transition of tin, TC=3.72°K, the niobium points served as probes to measure fluctuations in the phase of the superconducting order parameter within the tin crystal. The temperature was slowly increased, beginning well below TC for tin, where the quantum phase was stable. Quantum phase fluctuations were first observed approximately 5 mdeg below TC. As the temperature continued to increase through this 5 mdeg range near TC, the characteristic frequency of the phase fluctuations increased 6 orders of magnitude. At TC a discontinuous transition to a resistive state gave rise to a finite voltage difference in the tin with the associated driven quantum phase precession. Thermodynamic Johnson noise voltages developed across this resistance of order 10−10Ω observably broadened the precession line. We will present the detailed temperature dependence of the frequency power spectrum of quantum phase fluctuations below and above TC.

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