Divergent nematic susceptibility near the pseudogap critical point in a cuprate superconductor
K. Ishida, S. Hosoi, Y. Teramoto, T. Usui, Y. Mizukami, K. Itaka, Y., Matsuda, T. Watanabe, T. Shibauchi

TL;DR
This study reveals divergent nematic susceptibility near the pseudogap critical point in cuprate superconductors, indicating a nematic quantum critical point that may influence high-temperature superconductivity.
Contribution
It provides direct evidence of nematic fluctuations and a nematic quantum critical point associated with the pseudogap in cuprates, linking nematicity to superconductivity.
Findings
Nematic susceptibility shows Curie-Weiss behavior above T*
An anomaly at T* indicates a second-order transition
Nematic susceptibility diverges near the pseudogap end point
Abstract
Superconductivity is a quantum phenomenon caused by bound pairs of electrons. In diverse families of strongly correlated electron systems, the electron pairs are not bound together by phonon exchange but instead by some other kind of bosonic fluctuations. In these systems, superconductivity is often found near a magnetic quantum critical point (QCP) where a magnetic phase vanishes in the zero-temperature limit. Moreover, the maximum of superconducting transition temperature Tc frequently locates near the magnetic QCP, suggesting that the proliferation of critical spin fluctuations emanating from the QCP plays an important role in Cooper pairing. In cuprate superconductors, however, the superconducting dome is usually separated from the antiferromagnetic phase and Tc attains its maximum value near the verge of enigmatic pseudogap state that appears below doping-dependent temperature T*.…
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