麻豆淫院


Electrons inside of some ceramic crystals appear to dissipate in a familiar way

Electrons inside of some ceramic crystals appear to dissipate in a familiar way
a, Resistivity of our Bi2212 film with p鈥=鈥0.23 as a function of magnetic field, at the indicated temperatures. The value of 蟻 at H鈥=鈥55鈥塗 is plotted versus T in Supplementary Fig. 3b of Supplementary section 3. b, Resistivity as a function of temperature, at H鈥=鈥0 (blue). The red diamonds are high-field data extrapolated to zero field by fitting 蟻(H) to a鈥+鈥塨H2. The error bars are estimated by the difference [蟻(H鈥=鈥55鈥塗)鈥夆垝鈥壪(H2鈥夆啋鈥0)]/2. The dashed line is a linear fit to the red diamonds. c, Hall coefficient of our Bi2212 film as a function of magnetic field, at the indicated temperatures. The value of RH at H鈥=鈥55鈥塗 is plotted versus T in d. d, Hall coefficient as a function of temperature for three cuprates, plotted as eRH/V, where e is the electron charge and V is the volume per Cu atom: Bi2212 at p鈥=鈥0.23 (red curve, H鈥=鈥9鈥塗; red dots, H鈥=鈥55鈥塗, c); Nd-LSCO at p鈥=鈥0.24 (blue, H鈥=鈥16鈥塗; from ref.鈥11); PCCO at x鈥=鈥0.17 (green, H鈥=鈥15鈥塗, right axis; from ref.鈥41). The red dashed line is a guide to the eye. Credit: Nature 麻豆淫院ics (2018). DOI: 10.1038/s41567-018-0334-2

A team of researchers from Canada, France and Poland has found that electrons inside of some ceramic crystals appear to dissipate in a surprising, yet familiar way鈥攑ossibly a clue to the reason for the odd behavior of "strange metals." In their paper published in the journal Nature 麻豆淫院ics, the researchers describe their experiments to better understand why strange metals behave the way they do.

The strange metals referred to in the study are also known as cuprates鈥攎aterials that at are poor conductors of electricity, but at very cold temperatures are superconductors. Their strangeness comes about as they are cooling, just prior to becoming superconductive鈥攖hey enter a state in which inside of them appear to dissipate energy as fast as theory suggests is possible. And no one has been able to explain how or why this happens. Equally strange, the strangeness of the materials appears to be associated with the Planck constant.

To learn more about the behavior of strange metals when they enter their strange state, the researchers subjected samples of the Bi2Sr2CaCu2 O8+未 to both high and low temperatures while measuring its resistance and other characteristics. They report evidence that bolsters theories suggesting that electrons in such organize themselves into a where the properties of each are dependent on the properties of all the others鈥攁 so called "maximally scrambled" state. Put another way, they found evidence that all of the electrons in the strange become entangled with all of the others. The researchers suggest such a state would surely explain how electrons in the material are able to scatter as fast as theory allows鈥攁nd why their resistance would be dependent on Planck's constant.

The results add credence to work by other theorists who applied the theory of holographic duality to look at the behavior of cuprates鈥攖he theory that allows for connecting scrambled quantum particles mathematically. It is currently used by theorists to explain the nature of black holes that exist in a higher dimension.

More information: A. Legros et al. Universal T-linear resistivity and Planckian dissipation in overdoped cuprates, Nature 麻豆淫院ics (2018).

Journal information: Nature 麻豆淫院ics

漏 2018 Science X Network

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