349 research outputs found

    Quantum kinetic approach to the calculation of the Nernst effect

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    We show that the strong Nernst effect observed recently in amorphous superconducting films far above the critical temperature is caused by the fluctuations of the superconducting order parameter. We employ the quantum kinetic approach for the derivation of the Nernst coefficient. We present here the main steps of the calculation and discuss some subtle issues that we encountered while calculating the Nernst coefficient. In particular, we demonstrate that in the limit T=0 the contribution of the magnetization ensures the vanishing of the Nernst signal in accordance with the third law of thermodynamics. We obtained a striking agreement between our theoretical calculations and the experimental data in a broad region of temperatures and magnetic fields.Comment: 24 pages, 13 figure

    Twin peaks in rf spectra of Fermi gases at unitarity

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    We calculate the radio-frequency spectrum of balanced and imbalanced ultracold Fermi gases in the normal phase at unitarity. For the homogeneous case the spectrum of both the majority and minority components always has a single peak even in the pseudogap regime. We furthermore show how the double-peak structures observed in recent experiments arise due to the inhomogeneity of the trapped gas. The main experimental features observed above the critical temperature in the recent experiment of Schunck et al. [Science 316, 867, (2007)] are recovered with no fitting parameters.Comment: v3: version accepted for publication as a Rapid Communication in PRA. With respect to v2, minor changes in the text and in the inset of Fig.

    Paired electron pockets in the hole-doped cuprates

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    We propose a theory for the underdoped hole-doped cuprates, focusing on the "nodal-anti-nodal dichotomy" observed in recent experiments. Our theory begins with an ordered antiferromagnetic Fermi liquid with electron and hole pockets. We argue that it is useful to consider a quantum transition at which the loss of antiferromagnetic order leads to a hypothetical metallic "algebraic charge liquid" (ACL) with pockets of charge -e and +e fermions, and an emergent U(1) gauge field; the instabilities of the ACL lead to the low temperature phases of the underdoped cuprates. The pairing instability leads to a superconductor with the strongest pairing within the -e Fermi pockets, a d-wave pairing signature for electrons, and very weak nodal-point pairing of the +e fermions near the Brillouin zone diagonals. The influence of an applied magnetic field is discussed using a proposed phase diagram as a function of field strength and doping. We describe the influence of gauge field and pairing fluctuations on the quantum Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations in the normal states induced by the field. For the finite temperature pseudogap region, our theory has some similarities to the phenomenological two-fluid model of -2e bosons and +e fermions proposed by Geshkenbein, Ioffe, and Larkin [cond-mat/9609209], which describes anomalous aspects of transverse transport in a magnetic field.Comment: 38 pages, 5 figures; (v3) added refs and shortened Section IV; (v4) added phase diagram

    Extended paraconductivity regime in underdoped cuprates

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    We reconsider transport experiments in strongly anisotropic superconducting cuprates and we find that universal Aslamazov-Larkin (AL) paraconductivity in two dimensions is surprisingly robust even in the underdoped regime below the pseudogap crossover temperature T^*. We also establish that the underlying normal state resistivity in the pseudogap phase is (almost) linear in temperature, with all the deviations being quantitatively accounted by AL paraconductivity. The disappearence of paraconductivity is governed by the disappearence of gaussian pair fluctuations at an energy scale related to T^*.Comment: 5 pages and 2 figure

    Magnetoconductivity of low-dimensional disordered conductors at the onset of the superconducting transition

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    Magnetoconductivity of the disordered two- and three-dimensional superconductors is addressed at the onset of superconducting transition. In this regime transport is dominated by the fluctuation effects and we account for the interaction corrections coming from the Cooper channel. In contrast to many previous studies we consider strong magnetic fields and various temperature regimes, which allow to resolve the existing discrepancies with the experiments. Specifically, we find saturation of the fluctuations induced magneto-conductivity for both two- and three-dimensional superconductors at already moderate magnetic fields and discuss possible dimensional crossover at the immediate vicinity of the critical temperature. The surprising observation is that closer to the transition temperature weaker magnetic field provides the saturation. It is remarkable also that interaction correction to magnetoconductivity coming from the Cooper channel, and specifically the so called Maki-Thompson contribution, remains to be important even away from the critical region.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur

    Fluctuoscopy of Disordered Two-Dimensional Superconductors

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    We revise the long studied problem of fluctuation conductivity (FC) in disordered two-dimensional superconductors placed in a perpendicular magnetic field by finally deriving the complete solution in the temperature-magnetic field phase diagram. The obtained expressions allow both to perform straightforward (numerical) calculation of the FC surface δσxx(tot)(T,H)\delta\sigma_{xx}^{(\mathrm{tot})}(T,H) and to get asymptotic expressions in all its qualitatively different domains. This surface becomes in particular non-trivial at low temperatures, where it is trough-shaped with δσxx(tot)(T,H)<0% \delta\sigma_{xx}^{(\mathrm{tot})}(T,H)<0. In this region, close to the quantum phase transition, δσxx(tot)(T,H=const)\delta\sigma_{xx}^{(\mathrm{tot})}(T,H=\mathrm{const}) is non-monotonic, in agreement with experimental findings. We reanalyzed and present comparisons to several experimental measurements. Based on our results we derive a qualitative picture of superconducting fluctuations close to Hc2(0)H_{\mathrm{c2}}(0) and T=0 where fluctuation Cooper pairs rotate with cyclotron frequency ωcΔBCS1\omega_{c}\sim\Delta_{\mathrm{BCS}}^{-1} and Larmor radius ξBCS\sim \xi_{\mathrm{BCS}}, forming some kind of quantum liquid with long coherence length ξQFξBCS\xi_{\mathrm{QF}}\gg\xi_{\mathrm{BCS}} and slow relaxation (τQFΔBCS1\tau_{\mathrm{QF}}\gg\hbar\Delta_{\mathrm{BCS}}^{-1}).Comment: 26 pages, 13 figures, 3 tables, RevTex 4.

    Josephson current noise above Tc in superconducting tunnel junctions

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    Tunnel junction between two superconductors is considered in the vicinity of the critical temperature. Superconductive fluctuations above Tc give rise to the noise of the ac Josephson current although the current itself is zero in average. As a result of fluctuations, current noise spectrum is peaked at the Josephson frequency, which may be considered as precursor of superconductivity in the normal state. Temperature dependence and shape of the Josephson current noise resonance line is calculated for various junction configurations.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figure

    Negative Echo in the Density Evolution of Ultracold Fermionic Gases

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    We predict a nonequilibrium critical phenomenon in the space-time density evolution of a fermionic gas above the temperature of transition into the superfluid phase. On the BCS side of the BEC-BCS crossover, the evolution of a localized density disturbance exhibits a negative echo at the point of the initial inhomogeneity. Approaching the BEC side, this effect competes with the slow spreading of the density of bosonic molecules. However, even here the echo dominates for large enough times. This effect may be used as an experimental tool to locate the position of the transition.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure

    c-Axis longitudinal magnetoresistance of the electron-doped superconductor Pr1.85Ce0.15CuO4

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    We report c-axis resistivity and longitudinal magnetoresistance measurements of superconducting Pr1.85Ce0.15CuO4 single crystals. In the temperature range 13K<T<32K, a negative magnetoresistance is observed at fields just above Hc2. Our studies suggest that this negative magnetoresistance is caused by superconducting fluctuations. At lower temperatures (T<13K), a different magnetoresistance behavior and a resistivity upturn are observed, whose origin is still unknown.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.

    Heating of quasiparticles driven by oscillations of the order parameter in short superconducting microbridges

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    We predict 'heating' of quasiparticles driven by order parameter oscillations in the resistive state of short superconducting microbridges. The finite relaxation time of the magnitude of the order parameter Δ|\Delta| and the dependence of the spectral functions both on Δ|\Delta| and the supervelocity QQ are the origin of this effect. Our result is opposite to those of Aslamazov and Larkin (Zh. Eks. Teor. Fiz. {\bf 70}, 1340 (1976)) and Schmid, Schon and Tinkham (Phys. Rev. B {\bf 21} 5076 (1980)) where 'cooling' of quasiparticles was found.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
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