Theory of Asymmetric Tunneling in the cuprate superconductors
P. W. Anderson, N. P. Ong

TL;DR
This paper uses Gutzwiller-Resonating Valence Bond theory to explain the asymmetric tunneling conductivity observed in cuprate high-$T_c$ superconductors, supporting the relevance of
Contribution
It provides a quantitative explanation for tunneling asymmetry in cuprates, linking it to the projective nature of the ground state and
Findings
Successfully fits experimental tunneling data
Explains the peak-dip-hump structure on the hole side
Supports the importance of
Abstract
We explain quantitatively, within the Gutzwiller-Resonating Valence Bond theory, the puzzling observation of tunneling conductivity between a metallic point and a cuprate high- superconductor which is markedly asymmetric between positive and negative voltage biases. The asymmetric part does not have a "coherence peak" but does show structure due to the gap. The fit to data is satisfactory within the over-simplifications of the theory; in particular, it explains the marked "peak-dip-hump" structure observed on the hole side and a number of other qualitative observations. This asymmetry is strong evidence for the projective nature of the ground state and hence for "t-J" physics.
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