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Comment on "Interferometric single-shot parity measurement in InAs-Al hybrid devices", Microsoft Quantum, Nature 638, 651-655 (2025) (2503.08944v1)

Published 11 Mar 2025 in cond-mat.mes-hall, cond-mat.supr-con, and quant-ph

Abstract: We consider the 'parity readout' of a (topological) superconductor claimed in Nature 638, 651-655 (2025). A prerequisite for this claim is the existence of a superconducting gap in the nanowire device. However, to determine the presence of a gap, Nature 638, 651-655 (2025) relied on the so-called topological gap protocol (TGP). Here, we show that the TGP can report the regions where the 'parity readout' occurred as either gapped or gapless, depending on data parameters such as magnetic field range and cutter pair (junction transparency). Compounding these issues are inaccuracies in the presented TGP outcomes, which limited investigation of reproducibility. Since these inconsistent outcomes demonstrate that the TGP is not a reliable diagnostic tool for the presence of a superconducting gap, we instead investigate the conductance data for the studied regions -- data that were not presented in Nature 638, 651-655 (2025), but are in the public data repository. These conductance data show that the regions where 'parity readout' occurred are in fact highly disordered and present no clear gap in the nanowire, i.e., the underlying conductance data show that these regions are indeed gapless. That these regions are gapless contradicts the claim that the reported measurements are of the parity of a superconducting nanowire, let alone the parity of a topological superconducting nanowire. Taken together, these issues mean that the core findings in Nature 638, 651-655 (2025) are not reliable and should be revisited.

Summary

Critical Examination of Parity Readout Methods in Hybrid InAs-Al Devices

In this scholarly commentary, Henry F. Legg addresses significant discrepancies in the methods and results presented in a paper published by Microsoft Quantum in Nature, which investigates the interferometric single-shot parity measurement in hybrid InAs-Al nanowire devices. Legg critically evaluates the diagnostic approach employed to ascertain the presence of a superconducting gap, a fundamental requisite for confidently measuring the parity of a superconducting nanowire.

Concerns Regarding the Topological Gap Protocol (TGP)

Legg identifies several critical issues with the topological gap protocol (TGP), which was used in the Nature paper to classify regions within the experimental setup as either gapped or gapless. A fundamental flaw highlighted is the variability in TGP outcomes based on data parameters such as magnetic field range and cutter pair settings, which undermines the reliability of the protocol as a diagnostic tool. Moreover, Legg's exhaustive analysis reveals coding inadequacies within the TGP's implementation, notably in its method of antisymmetrization, that further contribute to erroneous results.

Reproducibility and Data Presentation

An essential inquiry Legg makes pertains to the reproducibility of the perceived parity readout effect in other potential regions that met the conditions laid out by the TGP. His critical exegesis uncovered significant omissions in the paper, where several regions theoretically satisfying the TGP were not investigated or reported. This oversight precludes the exploration of reproducibility, a cornerstone of robust scientific conclusions.

Conductance Data Analysis

One of Legg's substantial contributions to the discussion is his shift from reliance on the TGP outcomes to direct analysis of the underlying conductance data, which were notably absent from the original paper. His inspection of the conductance data reveals high levels of disorder and an absence of a clear superconducting gap within the nanowires. This observation strongly suggests that the parity readout could be attributed to finely tuned mesoscopic disorder effects rather than the coherent behavior of a gapped superconducting system.

Implications and Speculations for Future Research

The commentary by Legg yields profound implications for future research in quantum computing and nanotechnology, urging a reassessment of diagnostic protocols such as the TGP. By illuminating the inadequacies and methodological errors present in the original paper, Legg's essay can serve as a pivotal reference that reinforces the necessity for precise and transparent data presentation as well as the adoption of rigorously tested diagnostic tools. Moreover, it advocates for a deeper exploration of the impact of mesoscopic disorder effects in the paper of topological superconductors, which could redefine approaches to device tuning and measurement in quantum computing research.

In summation, Henry F. Legg's work serves as an essential critique, urging the scientific community to revisit the findings of the Nature paper, refine its methodologies, and rigorously scrutinize claims surrounding parity measurement in superconducting nanowires.

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