Meissner effect, Spin Meissner effect and charge expulsion in superconductors
J. E. Hirsch

TL;DR
This paper proposes a unified theory explaining the Meissner and Spin Meissner effects in superconductors, emphasizing charge expulsion, orbit expansion, and topological aspects, which challenge and extend conventional understanding.
Contribution
It introduces a novel framework linking charge and spin currents to orbit expansion and charge expulsion, providing a unified explanation for superconducting electrodynamics and topological stability.
Findings
Charge expulsion from interior to surface in superconductors.
Spin current arises from a spin Hall effect due to internal electric fields.
Superconducting state stability linked to orbital angular momentum of 5/2.
Abstract
The Meissner effect and the Spin Meissner effect are the spontaneous generation of charge and spin current respectively near the surface of a metal making a transition to the superconducting state. The Meissner effect is well known but, I argue, not explained by the conventional theory, the Spin Meissner effect has yet to be detected. I propose that both effects take place in all superconductors, the first one in the presence of an applied magnetostatic field, the second one even in the absence of applied external fields. Both effects can be understood under the assumption that electrons expand their orbits and thereby lower their quantum kinetic energy in the transition to superconductivity. Associated with this process, the metal expels negative charge from the interior to the surface and an electric field is generated in the interior. The resulting charge current can be understood as…
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