6 research outputs found

    Direct evidence for Cooper pairing without a spectral gap in a disordered superconductor above Tc

    Get PDF
    The idea that preformed Cooper pairs could exist in a superconductor at temperatures higher than its zero-resistance critical temperature (T-c) has been explored for unconventional, interfacial, and disordered superconductors, but direct experimental evidence is lacking. We used scanning tunneling noise spectroscopy to show that preformed Cooper pairs exist up to temperatures much higher than T-c in the disordered superconductor titanium nitride by observing an enhancement in the shot noise that is equivalent to a change of the effective charge from one to two electron charges. We further show that the spectroscopic gap fills up rather than closes with increasing temperature. Our results demonstrate the existence of a state above T-c that, much like an ordinary metal, has no (pseudo)gap but carries charge through paired electrons.Quantum Matter and Optic

    Bacteraemia in man and animals: An overview

    No full text

    Host Plant Strategies to Combat Against Viruses Effector Proteins

    No full text

    Nonlinear Interactions of Light and Matter with Absorption

    No full text
    corecore