A determination of the superconducting (SC) electron pairing symmetry forms
the basis for establishing a microscopic mechansim for superconductivity. For
iron pnictide superconductors, the s±-pairing symmetry theory predicts the
presence of a sharp neutron spin resonance at an energy below the sum of hole
and electron SC gap energies (E≤2Δ) below Tc. On the other hand,
the s++-pairing symmetry expects a broad spin excitation enhancement at an
energy above 2Δ below Tc. Although the resonance has been observed in
iron pnictide superconductors at an energy below 2Δ consistent with the
s±-pairing symmetry, the mode has also be interpreted as arising from the
s++-pairing symmetry with E≥2Δ due to its broad energy width and
the large uncertainty in determining the SC gaps. Here we use inelastic neutron
scattering to reveal a sharp resonance at E=7 meV in SC
NaFe0.935Co0.045As (Tc=18 K). On warming towards Tc, the mode
energy hardly softens while its energy width increases rapidly. By comparing
with calculated spin-excitations spectra within the s± and
s++-pairing symmetries, we conclude that the ground-state resonance in
NaFe0.935Co0.045As is only consistent with the s±-pairing, and
is inconsistent with the s++-pairing symmetry.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures. submitted to PR