Algebraic charge liquids

Author:  ["Ribhu K. Kaul","Yong Baek Kim","Subir Sachdev","T. Senthil"]

Publication:  Nature Physics

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Tags:     Physics

Abstract

High-temperature superconductivity emerges in the copper oxide compounds on changing the electron density of an insulator in which the electron spins are antiferromagnetically ordered. A key characteristic of the superconductor1 is that electrons can be extracted from it at zero energy only if their momenta take one of four specific values (the ‘nodal points’). A central enigma has been the evolution of those zero-energy electrons in the metallic state between the antiferromagnet and the superconductor, and recent experiments yield apparently contradictory results. The oscillation of the resistance in this metal as a function of magnetic field2,3 indicates that the zero-energy electrons carry momenta that lie on elliptical ‘Fermi pockets’, whereas ejection of electrons by high-intensity light indicates that the zero-energy electrons have momenta only along arc-like regions4,5, or ‘Fermi arcs’. We present a theory of new states of matter, which we call ‘algebraic charge liquids’, and which arise naturally between the antiferromagnet and the superconductor, and reconcile these observations. Our theory also explains a puzzling dependence of the density of superconducting electrons on the total electron density, and makes a number of unique predictions for future experiments.

Cite this article

Kaul, R., Kim, Y., Sachdev, S. et al. Algebraic charge liquids. Nature Phys 4, 28–31 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys790

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