BCS theory of superconductivity: the world's largest Madoff scheme?
J. E. Hirsch

TL;DR
The paper critically questions the validity of BCS theory of superconductivity, comparing it to a fraudulent scheme, and proposes an alternative theory that aims to explain all superconductors and guide the discovery of new high-temperature superconductors.
Contribution
It challenges the conventional BCS theory's validity and introduces an alternative theory that addresses its shortcomings and unifies the understanding of all superconductors.
Findings
Increasing number of 'unconventional' superconductors not explained by BCS.
BCS theory cannot explain the Meissner effect.
Proposed alternative theory offers explanations and guidelines for new high-temperature superconductors.
Abstract
The time-tested BCS theory of superconductivity is generally accepted to be the correct theory of conventional superconductivity by physicists and, by extension, by the world at large. In a different realm of human activity, until very recently Bernard Madoff's time-tested investment operation was generally accepted as true and legitimate in the financial world. Madoff's Ponzi scheme, where old investors were being paid off by funds contributed by new investors, was fundamentally flawed, yet was able to thrive for decades because of many vested interests. `Red flags' suggesting its illegitimacy were ignored. Here I suggest that the same is true of BCS theory. There are an increasing number of `red flags' that strongly suggest the possibility that BCS theory may be fundamentally flawed. For example, an ever-growing number of superconductors are being classified as `unconventional', not…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
