The High Temperature Superconductivity in Cuprates: Physics of the Pseudogap Region
Paolo Cea

TL;DR
This paper explores the physics of high-temperature superconductivity in cuprates, focusing on the pseudogap region, and proposes explanations for phenomena like Fermi arcs, nodal gaps, charge density waves, and quantum oscillations.
Contribution
It introduces a theoretical framework linking condensate excitations to experimental observations and explains the interplay between charge order and superconductivity in the pseudogap region.
Findings
Identification of roton-like excitations as key to specific heat anomalies
Explanation of Fermi arcs and pockets via nodal quasielectrons
Analysis of charge density wave interactions with magnetic fields
Abstract
We discuss the physics of the high temperature superconductivity in hole doped copper oxide ceramics in the pseudogap region. Starting from an effective reduced Hamiltonian relevant to the dynamics of holes injected into the copper oxide layers proposed in a previous paper, we determine the superconductive condensate wavefunction. We show that the low-lying elementary condensate excitations are analogous to the rotons in superfluid . We argue that the rotons-like excitations account for the specific heat anomaly at the critical temperature. We discuss and compare with experimental observations the London penetration length, the Abrikosov vortices, the upper and lower critical magnetic fields, and the critical current density. We give arguments to explain the origin of the Fermi arcs and Fermi pockets. We investigate the nodal gap in the cuprate superconductors and discuss both the…
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