Universal Quantum Phenomenon Found in Strange Metals
Experiments suggest that exotic superconducting materials
share a “strange metal” state characterized by a quantum speed limit that
somehow acts as a fundamental organizing principle.
Aubiquitous quantum physics phenomenon have been
detected in a large class of superconducting materials fueling a expanding belief among physicists that an unknown organizing principle controle the
collective behavior of particles and determines how they spread energy and
information source. Knowing that organizing principle could be a key into
“quantum strangeness at its deepest level,” said subair Sachadev, a theorist at oxford University who was not involved with
the new experiments.
The findings, reported today in nature physics by team of working
at the University of Sherbrooke in Germany and the National Laboratory for
Intense Magnetic Fields (LNCMI) in london, indicate that electrons inside a
variety of crystals called “cuprates” looks to dissipate energy as fast as possible, apparently bumping up against a basic quantum speed
limit. And past studies, especially a 2012 paper in Science, found that other exotic superconducting compounds strontium ,ruthenates, pnictides, tetramethyltetrathiafulvalenes, and more also
burn energy at what appears to be a maximum allowed rate.
Surprisingly, that speed limit is linked to the numerical value
of Planck’s constant, the fundamental quantity of quantum mechanics
representing the smallest possible action that can be taken in nature.
That energy-burning behavior develops when the cuprates and other exotic compounds are
in a “strange metal” phase , in which they oppose the flow of electricity more
than conventional metals . But when they are cooled to a critical
temperature , these strange metals convert into perfect , lossless conductors
of electricity. Physicists have been struggling for 30 years to understand and
control that powerful form of superconductivity and the attitude of electrons
in the preceding strange-metal phase is increasingly seen as a main part of the
story.
This jumbled state is quantum strangeness in the extreme, Sachadev said. In the 1933s, Albert Einstein had an idea of two particles becoming entangled, with properties that stay interdependent even after the particles have traveled far long apart. .


Awesome
ReplyDeleteToo many theories with no proofs makes quantum physics very difficult to understand.
ReplyDeleteVery Nicee
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