“…When two electrical conductors are placed in close proximity, current driven through one ('drive') conductor may induce a voltage (or current) in the second ('drag') conductor. Frictional drag measurements have mostly been carried out between normal state conductors in coupled 2D semiconductor systems [13][14][15][16][17], graphene systems [18,19], 1D semiconductor systems [20][21][22], 1D complex oxide systems [23], and quantum dot systems [24]. Frictional drag in the superconducting regime has been carried out in normal metal-superconductor systems [25,26] and the phenomenon is explained by the local fluctuating electric field induced by mobile vortices in the superconducting layer [27] or Coulomb coupling between two conductors.…”