Scale-invariance as the cause of the superconducting dome in the cuprates
Zhidong Leong, Kridsanaphong Limtragool, Chandan Setty, Philip W., Phillips

TL;DR
This paper suggests that scale-invariance and the resulting power-law liquid behavior in cuprates explain the characteristic superconducting dome, linking critical self-energy scaling to the emergence of high-temperature superconductivity.
Contribution
It demonstrates that scale-invariance in the self-energy naturally leads to the superconducting dome in cuprates, providing a new theoretical explanation for this phenomenon.
Findings
Self-energy exhibits critical scaling over doping levels.
Quasiparticle weight vanishes in underdoped regime.
Superconducting transition temperature forms a dome shape.
Abstract
Recent photoemission spectroscopy measurements (T. J. Reber et al., arXiv:1509.01611) of cuprate superconductors have inferred that the self-energy exhibits critical scaling over an extended doping regime, thereby calling into question the conventional wisdom that critical scaling exists only at isolated points. In particular, this new state of matter, dubbed a power-law liquid, has a self-energy whose imaginary part scales as , with in the overdoped Fermi-liquid state and in the optimal to underdoped regime. Previously, we showed that this self-energy can arise from interactions between electrons and unparticles, a scale-invariant sector that naturally emerges from strong correlations. Here, taking the self-energy as a given, we first reconstruct the real part of the self-energy. We find that the…
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