Quantitative Determination of the Pairing Interactions for High Temperature Superconductivity in Cuprates
Jin Mo Bok, Jong Ju Bae, Han-Yong Choi, Chandra M. Varma, Wentao, Zhang, Junfeng He, Yuxiao Zhang, Li Yu, X. J. Zhou

TL;DR
This paper uses advanced laser-based photoemission techniques to quantitatively analyze the pairing interactions and self-energies in cuprate high-temperature superconductors, revealing key insights into their fluctuation mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides the first quantitative determination of the normal and pairing self-energies in cuprates, uncovering the nature of effective interactions and their energy dependence.
Findings
Both attractive and repulsive interactions are nearly angle independent.
Interactions are nearly frequency independent near Tc, with a low-energy feature at 50 meV.
Below Tc, interactions change similarly due to superconductivity.
Abstract
A profound problem in modern condensed matter physics is discovering and understanding the nature of the fluctuations and their coupling to fermions in cuprates which lead to high temperature superconductivity and the invariably associated strange metal state. Here we report the quantitative determination of the normal and pairing self-energies, made possible by laser-based angle-resolved photoemission measurements with unprecedented accuracy and stability. Through a precise inversion procedure, both the effective interactions in the attractive d-wave symmetry and the repulsive part in the full symmetry are determined. The latter are nearly angle independent. Near Tc both interactions are nearly independent of frequency, and have almost the same magnitude, over the complete energy range of up to about 0.4 eV except for a low energy feature around 50 meV present only in the repulsive…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Advanced Condensed Matter Physics · Iron-based superconductors research
