The role of rare events in the pinning problem
Martin Buchacek, Vadim B. Geshkenbein, Gianni Blatter

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new pinning mechanism in type II superconductors where rare defect events form clusters that dominate vortex pinning in the weak regime, extending the understanding of pinning phenomena.
Contribution
It identifies and analyzes a third pinning regime involving defect clusters that dominate over traditional weak pinning in certain conditions.
Findings
Cluster pinning extends strong pinning into the weak regime.
Pinning-force density from clusters surpasses weak pinning predictions.
Correlations between defects are crucial for understanding vortex pinning.
Abstract
Type II superconductors exhibit a fascinating phenomenology that is determined by the dynamical properties of the vortex matter hosted by the material. A crucial element in this phenomenology is vortex pinning by material defects, e.g., immobilizing vortices at small drives and thereby guaranteeing dissipation-free current flow. Pinning models for vortices and other topological defects, such as domain walls in magnets or dislocations in crystals, come in two standard variants: i) weak collective pinning, where individual weak defects are unable to pin, while the random accumulation of many force centers within a collective pinning volume combines into an effective pin, and ii) strong pinning, where strong defects produce large vortex displacements and bistabilities that lead to pinning on the level of individual defects. The transition between strong and weak pinning is quantified by…
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