Microscopic gauge-invariant theory of the c-axis infrared response of bilayer cuprate superconductors and the origin of the superconductivity induced absorption bands
J. Chaloupka, C. Bernhard, and D. Munzar

TL;DR
This paper develops a gauge-invariant microscopic theory for the c-axis infrared response of bilayer cuprate superconductors, explaining key absorption features and their relation to collective modes and pair-breaking phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces a gauge-invariant microscopic model incorporating bilayer-split bands and vertex corrections, providing new insights into the origin of superconductivity-induced absorption bands.
Findings
Identification of a collective intra-bilayer mode analogous to the Bogolyubov-Anderson mode.
Interpretation of a 1000/cm peak as a pair-breaking feature.
Explanation of the 400/cm peak as a collective intra-bilayer mode.
Abstract
We report on results of our theoretical study of the c-axis infrared conductivity of bilayer high-Tc cuprate superconductors using a microscopic model involving the bilayer-split (bonding and antibonding) bands. An emphasis is on the gauge-invariance of the theory, which turns out to be essential for the physical understanding of the electrodynamics of these compounds. The description of the optical response involves local (intra-bilayer and inter-bilayer) current densities and local conductivities. The local conductivities are obtained using a microscopic theory, where the quasiparticles of the two bands are coupled to spin fluctuations. The coupling leads to superconductivity and is described at the level of generalized Eliashberg theory. Also addressed is the simpler case of quasiparticles coupled by a separable and nonretarded interaction. The gauge invariance of the theory is…
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