| Differences between revisions 3 and 35 (spanning 32 versions) | Back to page |
|
Size: 572
Comment:
|
Size: 2200
Comment:
|
| Deletions are marked like this. | Additions are marked like this. |
| Line 1: | Line 1: |
| == Strange line shapes and ECFL == | == Strange ARPES line shapes and ECFL == |
| Line 3: | Line 3: |
| <<fl(E)>>ver since high temperature superconductors have been known to scientists, they have been quite baffling. The central question is whether the standard textbook theories that we know and love already are applicable to describing these fascinating materials. The general sense is that those standard theories must be augmented to a great extent, if not replaced completely. Why this general sense? It is, of course, because of many puzzling experimental results that the standard textbook theories have a hard time explaining. | <<fl(E)>>ver since high temperature superconductors have been discovered by scientists, they have been quite baffling, to say the least. The central question is whether the standard textbook theories that we know and love already are applicable to these fascinating materials. The general sense is that those standard theories must be augmented to a great extent, if not replaced completely. Why? It is because of many puzzling experimental results that defy a proper understanding. ARPES results are among the most mysterious! [[http://www-ssrl.slac.stanford.edu/research/highlights_archive/htsc.pdf|{{attachment:SSRL-ECFL-Advertisement.png}}|class=none]] As the above advertisement says, we might be onto solving this conundrum! The main impetus came from a <<ln("http://physics.ucsc.edu/~sriram/", "theoretical breakthrough (ECFL) by Shastry")>>, which seemed to shed light on a long-standing puzzle in high temperature superconductivity in a big way—explaining anomalous ARPES line shapes. But this is not all. Follow the links below, to see how this initial model (simple ECFL) had to be modified to explain more data and to shed light on the superconductivity. == Links, students == * The paper can be accessed from <<doi("10.1103/PhysRevLett.107.056404","here")>> or <<ln("http://arxiv.org/abs/1104.2631", "here (public)")>>. * My invited talk at the March meeting 2012: <<ln("http://meetings.aps.org/Meeting/MAR12/Event/160938", "abstract")>> and <<ln("http://absuploads.aps.org/presentation.cfm?pid=10188", "presentation")>> * <<ln("http://www-ssrl.slac.stanford.edu/newsletters/headlines/headlines_10-11.html#Highlight1", "A news article about our work at the Stanford Synchrtron Lightsource")>> * <<ln("http://www-ssrl.slac.stanford.edu/research/highlights_archive/htsc.pdf", "A science highlight article about our work at the Stanford Synchrtron Lightsource")>> * <<ln("http://news.ucsc.edu/2011/07/high-temperature-superconductors.html", "News article at UC Santa Cruz")>> * [[pECFL|Phenomenological ECFL]] and [[nMBDOS|more]] * The UCSC data used in this paper were obtained by GHG at the SSRL. |
Strange ARPES line shapes and ECFL
Ever since high temperature superconductors have been discovered by scientists, they have been quite baffling, to say the least. The central question is whether the standard textbook theories that we know and love already are applicable to these fascinating materials. The general sense is that those standard theories must be augmented to a great extent, if not replaced completely. Why? It is because of many puzzling experimental results that defy a proper understanding. ARPES results are among the most mysterious!
As the above advertisement says, we might be onto solving this conundrum! The main impetus came from a theoretical breakthrough (ECFL) by Shastry, which seemed to shed light on a long-standing puzzle in high temperature superconductivity in a big way—explaining anomalous ARPES line shapes. But this is not all. Follow the links below, to see how this initial model (simple ECFL) had to be modified to explain more data and to shed light on the superconductivity.
Links, students
The paper can be accessed from here or here (public).
My invited talk at the March meeting 2012: abstract and presentation
A news article about our work at the Stanford Synchrtron Lightsource
A science highlight article about our work at the Stanford Synchrtron Lightsource
- The UCSC data used in this paper were obtained by GHG at the SSRL.
Research in the Gweon Group
