Unveiling Signatures of Topological Phases in Open Kitaev Chains and Ladders
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 20:00 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Differential conductance in open Kitaev chains and ladders carries signatures of topological phases, some of which survive moderate disorder but vanish upon hybridization with external reservoirs.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Applying a scattering technique within the Bogoliubov-de Gennes formulation to Kitaev chains and ladders connected to normal and superconducting leads shows that the differential conductance encodes the topological phase diagram of the isolated systems. Some of these conductance signatures remain robust against moderate disorder. Local spectroscopic measurements obtained by varying the position and distance of the normal electrode further map the spatial structure of the edge modes. Examination of the internal modes demonstrates that topological protection disappears when the original edge states hybridize with states belonging to the external reservoirs.
What carries the argument
Scattering technique within the Bogoliubov-de Gennes formulation for open systems, used to obtain differential conductance and local response as functions of lead position and system parameters.
If this is right
- Differential conductance can serve as an electrical probe of topological order in nanowire devices.
- A fraction of the conductance signatures of topology remain detectable even in the presence of moderate disorder.
- The position of a local normal electrode controls whether topological edge modes are visible in the measured response.
- Topological protection present in an isolated chain or ladder is lost once the system states hybridize with reservoir states.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Device designs must limit the strength of coupling to external leads if topological protection is required for operation.
- The same scattering approach could be applied to test whether other one-dimensional topological superconductors exhibit similar loss of protection in open geometries.
- Experimental searches for topological signatures in mesoscopic wires should include controlled variation of lead coupling to distinguish protected from hybridized regimes.
Load-bearing premise
The scattering technique within the Bogoliubov-de Gennes formulation applied to the open system with external leads faithfully reproduces the topological invariants and edge-mode properties without artifacts from lead modeling or coupling strength.
What would settle it
Compute or measure the differential conductance spectrum for a Kitaev chain with increasing normal-lead coupling strength and check whether the zero-bias peak or other predicted topological features disappear at the same coupling values where the calculated mode hybridization begins.
Figures
read the original abstract
In this work, the general problem of the characterization of the topological phase of an open quantum system is addressed. In particular, we study the topological properties of Kitaev chains and ladders under the perturbing effect of a current flux injected into the system using an external normal lead and derived from it via a superconducting electrode. After discussing the topological phase diagram of the isolated systems, using a scattering technique within the Bogoliubov de Gennes formulation, we analyze the differential conductance properties of these topological devices as a function of all relevant model parameters. The relevant problem of implementing local spectroscopic measurements to characterize topological systems is also addressed by studying the system electrical response as a function of the position and the distance of the normal electrode (tip). The results show how the signatures of topological order affect the electrical response of the analyzed systems, a subset of which being robust also against the effects of a moderate amount of disorder. The analysis of the internal modes of the nanodevices demonstrates that topological protection can be lost when quantum states of an initially isolated topological system are hybridized with those of the external reservoirs. The conclusions of this work could be useful in understanding the topological phases of nanowire-based mesoscopic devices.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript addresses the characterization of topological phases in open Kitaev chains and ladders coupled to normal and superconducting leads. After reviewing the phase diagram of the isolated systems, it employs a scattering technique in the Bogoliubov-de Gennes formalism to compute differential conductance as a function of model parameters, normal-electrode position, and moderate disorder. The central claims are that topological signatures appear in the electrical response (including zero-bias features), a subset of these signatures remain robust to moderate disorder, and hybridization with external reservoirs can destroy topological protection.
Significance. If the conductance signatures are shown to be independent of lead modeling details, the work would provide a concrete route to local spectroscopic characterization of topological nanowires via transport, directly relevant to mesoscopic experiments on Majorana modes.
major comments (2)
- [scattering technique and differential conductance analysis] The central claim that differential-conductance signatures directly reflect the topological invariants of the isolated chain/ladder requires explicit verification that these features survive in the weak-coupling limit and remain invariant under changes in lead bandwidth or coupling strength. The abstract itself notes that hybridization destroys protection, yet no such limit or invariance test is described.
- [disorder analysis] The statement that 'a subset' of signatures is robust to moderate disorder is load-bearing for the experimental relevance claim, but the manuscript supplies no quantitative definition of 'moderate' (e.g., relative to gap or hopping) nor statistics over disorder realizations; without these, the robustness cannot be assessed.
minor comments (2)
- [methods] Notation for the normal-lead coupling and the position-dependent tip conductance should be defined explicitly before the numerical results are presented.
- [introduction] Standard references to the closed Kitaev chain phase diagram and to prior BdG scattering studies on Majorana nanowires should be added for context.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful reading and constructive comments. We address the two major points below and will revise the manuscript accordingly to strengthen the presentation of our results.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [scattering technique and differential conductance analysis] The central claim that differential-conductance signatures directly reflect the topological invariants of the isolated chain/ladder requires explicit verification that these features survive in the weak-coupling limit and remain invariant under changes in lead bandwidth or coupling strength. The abstract itself notes that hybridization destroys protection, yet no such limit or invariance test is described.
Authors: We agree that an explicit check in the weak-coupling limit and invariance tests under lead-parameter changes would strengthen the central claim. Our scattering calculations employ finite but tunable coupling; the reported conductance features are obtained in regimes where the lead-system hybridization is weak enough for topological signatures to remain visible. In the revised manuscript we will add a dedicated subsection (or appendix) that (i) systematically reduces the coupling strength toward the weak-coupling limit while tracking the zero-bias and finite-bias features, and (ii) varies lead bandwidth and coupling strength over a representative range, confirming that the identified signatures are stable within the parameter window used in the main text. These additions will also make explicit the crossover to the hybridization-dominated regime already alluded to in the abstract. revision: yes
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Referee: [disorder analysis] The statement that 'a subset' of signatures is robust to moderate disorder is load-bearing for the experimental relevance claim, but the manuscript supplies no quantitative definition of 'moderate' (e.g., relative to gap or hopping) nor statistics over disorder realizations; without these, the robustness cannot be assessed.
Authors: We acknowledge that a quantitative definition of 'moderate' disorder and ensemble statistics are necessary for a rigorous assessment. In the original calculations, disorder amplitudes were chosen to lie below the bulk gap scale while still affecting some conductance features. In the revision we will (i) state the disorder strength explicitly in units of the hopping parameter t (e.g., W ≤ 0.3t–0.5t, with the precise range tied to the gap size), and (ii) present averages and standard deviations over at least 50–100 independent disorder realizations for the key conductance traces, thereby quantifying the fraction of signatures that remain robust. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity detected
full rationale
The paper first discusses the topological phase diagram of the isolated Kitaev systems, then applies the standard scattering technique in the Bogoliubov-de Gennes formulation to the open system with external leads. No load-bearing steps reduce by construction to fitted parameters, self-definitions, or self-citation chains; the conductance signatures are computed from the model Hamiltonian and lead couplings without renaming known results or smuggling ansatzes. The derivation remains self-contained against external benchmarks of BdG scattering theory, consistent with the absence of any quoted reduction in the abstract or claims.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- standard math Bogoliubov-de Gennes formulation accurately describes the superconducting nanowire systems under study
Reference graph
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