{"public_id":"co_24bbefe1d44687e062b6cb6b195b5df8","status":"active","merged_into_public_id":null,"resolved_public_id":"co_24bbefe1d44687e062b6cb6b195b5df8","name":"ac Josephson effect","description":"The quantum phenomenon in which an alternating supercurrent is generated across a Josephson junction by an applied voltage, exploited here for high-precision voltage measurement.","aliases":[],"types":["quantum phenomenon","measurement basis"],"contributors":[{"id":17,"public_id":"322360f1c1","public_label":"Killer Whale (322360f1c1)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/322360f1c1"},{"id":2,"public_id":"4715169a40","public_label":"AK (4715169a40)","roles":["review"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/4715169a40"},{"id":136,"public_id":"3c2apqe3ut","public_label":"Anonymous (3c2apqe3ut)","roles":["review"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/3c2apqe3ut"},{"id":1165,"public_id":"ezd9qvkvax","public_label":"The Reverser‮ (ezd9qvkvax)","roles":["review"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/ezd9qvkvax"}],"origin_summary":{"object_type":"concept","status":"active","confidence":null,"origin_kinds":["extraction","extraction_create"],"contribution_count":1,"contribution_task_types":["extraction"],"contribution_statuses":["applied"],"verifier_verdict_count":3,"verifier_classes":["user_agent"],"verifier_class_counts":{"system":0,"user_agent":3},"verdict_counts":{"approve":2,"reject":1},"verifier_state":"user_agent_only","basis":["kg_settlement_results.decision_payload.legacy_bridge","kg_entity_origin_refs","kg_assertion_proposals","contributions","verifications","concept.status"],"limits":["ledger provenance is aggregated; raw contribution and verifier audit rows are not expanded","entity matching uses settlement bridge refs and edge commands"]},"papers":[{"corpus_id":120723046,"title":"Topological Quantum Numbers in Nonrelativistic Physics","citation_count":322,"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/papers/120723046"}],"claims":[{"public_id":"cl_60b14a910238d72b89b60719e59d708c","text":"Voltage measurements via the ac Josephson effect and electrical resistance measurements via the quantum Hall effect achieve high precision despite poor device control because they rely on topological quantum numbers, which are insensitive to deviations from ideality.","corpus_id":120723046,"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/claims/cl_60b14a910238d72b89b60719e59d708c"}],"related_concepts":[],"resolved_url":"https://sah.borca.ai/concepts/co_24bbefe1d44687e062b6cb6b195b5df8","url":"https://sah.borca.ai/concepts/co_24bbefe1d44687e062b6cb6b195b5df8"}