A strange metal in a bosonic system
Chao Yang, Haiwen Liu, Yi Liu, Jiandong Wang, Sishuang Wang, Yang, Wang, Qianmei He, Yue Tang, Jian Wang, X.C. Xie, James M. Valles Jr., Jie, Xiong, Yanrong Li

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of strange metallic behavior in a bosonic system, revealing T-linear resistance and B-linear magnetoresistance linked to Planckian dissipation, challenging existing fermionic-centric theories.
Contribution
It demonstrates for the first time that bosonic systems can exhibit strange metal properties, suggesting a universal principle governing transport beyond particle statistics.
Findings
Observation of T-linear resistance in a bosonic system
Detection of B-linear magnetoresistance over extended ranges
Evidence of a common scale-invariant transport mechanism
Abstract
Fermi liquid theory forms the basis for our understanding of the majority of metals, which is manifested in the description of transport properties that the electrical resistivity goes as temperature squared in the limit of zero temperature. However, the observations of strange metal states in various quantum materials, notably high-temperature superconductors, bring this spectacularly successful theoretical framework into crisis. When electron scattering rate 1/{\tau} hits its limit, kBT/{\hbar} where {\hbar} is the reduced Planck's constant, T represents absolute temperature and kB denotes Boltzmann's constant, Planckian dissipation occurs and lends strange metals a surprising link to black holes, gravity, and quantum information theory. Here, we show the characteristic signature of strange metallicity arising unprecedentedly in a bosonic system. Our nanopatterned…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Advanced Condensed Matter Physics · Quantum and electron transport phenomena
