Researchers find the ties that bind electrons in high-temperature superconductivity

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The two figures show the results obtained with a specialized scanning tunneling microscope at temperatures well above and well below when the electrons pair up in high-temperature superconductors. The top figure shows an atomic scale map of the stren ...
The two figures show the results obtained with a specialized scanning tunneling microscope at temperatures well above and well below when the electrons pair up in high-temperature superconductors. The top figure shows an atomic scale map of the strength (delta) for pairing of electrons while superconducting, with red showing the strongest pairing and blue the weakest. The bottom figure shows a measurement related to electron-electron interaction on the exact same atomic sites at a temperature, well above the superconducting transition temperature, when electrons repel each other. The surprising connection between these two measurements is the main finding of the paper published in Science by the team from Princeton. Credit: Yazdani Group

For more than 20 years since the discovery of high-temperature superconductivity, scientists have been debating the underlying physical mechanism for this exotic phenomenon, which has the potential to revolutionize the electrical power distribution network.


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All News summaries for April 10, 2008