Local view of superconducting fluctuations
Shai Wissberg, Aviad Frydman, Beena Kalisky

TL;DR
This paper uses a scanning SQUID to image local superconducting fluctuations in Nb, revealing spatial and temporal variations and quantized susceptibility steps near Tc, offering insights into fluctuation properties.
Contribution
It introduces a local imaging technique to study superconducting fluctuations, providing detailed spatial and temporal information not accessible through global measurements.
Findings
Detection of spatial and temporal superconducting fluctuations.
Observation of quantized steps in susceptibility near Tc.
Local vortex dissipation as a probe of fluctuations.
Abstract
Superconducting transitions are driven by thermal fluctuations close to the transition temperature, Tc. These fluctuations are averaged out in global measurements, leaving imprints on susceptibility and resistance measurements. Here, we use a scanning superconducting quantum interference device to image thermal superconducting fluctuations in Nb, a conventional BCS superconductor. We observe fluctuations in both space and time which manifest themselves as grains of weaker and stronger diamagnetic response, exhibiting telegraph-like noise as a function of time. Local fluctuations are also found in the imaginary component of the susceptibility demonstrating that the local vortex dissipation can also be used as a probe of the fluctuations. An important outcome of our measurements is the observation and realization that the susceptibility decrease to zero as the temperature is raised…
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