Researchers snap-shot fastest observations of superconductivity yet
The scientists - from the Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, the University of British Columbia (UBC) and other institutions - liken the new technique to the development of high-speed film capture in the early days of photography.
"The solution we devised is based on the use of ultrafast light pulses, lasting 10 femtoseconds or 10 million billionths of a second," says Claudio Giannetti of the Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Italy, and an international visiting research scholar at the UBC Peter Wall Institute for Advanced Studies, who coordinated the research.
A major hurdle in understanding superconducting properties is determining whether the electron interactions occurring inside the materials are direct and instantaneous, or mediated by some delayed interaction. The advanced techniques--much like the high-speed photography invented by Eadweard Muybridge more than 100 years ago to film galloping horses--helped the researchers 'slow down' and observe the process.
"It was an exciting challenge to merge completely different results and approaches, such as ultrafast laser optics, photoelectron spectroscopies, and first-principles theory," says professor Andrea Damascelli, director of UBC's Quantum Matter Institute (QMI) and senior fellow with the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research Quantum Materials Program. Damascelli led UBC's research component of the project.
The snap-shot observations, detailed in Nature Physics, support the hypothesis that electron interactions are delayed and mediated by their interaction with the spin and magnetic pull of other electrons. The process took only 10 femtoseconds - something that, up till now, material scientists had been unable to directly observe.
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