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Superconductivity and quantum mechanics.


Superconductivity superconductivity, abnormally high electrical conductivity of certain substances. The phenomenon was discovered in 1911 by Kamerlingh Onnes, who found that the resistance of mercury dropped suddenly to zero at a temperature of about 4.2°K;.  and quantum mechanics quantum mechanics: see quantum theory.
quantum mechanics

Branch of mathematical physics that deals with atomic and subatomic systems. It is concerned with phenomena that are so small-scale that they cannot be described in classical terms, and it is
 

The new high-temperature form of superconductivitythat is currently setting the physics world on its ear may also illustrate the problems of applying quantum mechanics to small numbers of objects, Edward Teller Noun 1. Edward Teller - United States physicist (born in Hungary) who worked on the first atom bomb and the first hydrogen bomb (1908-2003)
Teller
 of Lawrence Livermore Lawrence Livermore may refer to:
  • Larry Livermore musician, record producer and music journalist.
  • Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.
 (Calif.) National Laboratory told the Loyola Conference on Mathematical and Interpretational Problems in Relativistic Quantum Theory Relativistic quantum theory

The quantum theory of particles which is consistent with the special theory of relativity, and thus can describe particles moving arbitrarily close to the speed of light.
, meeting in New Orleans New Orleans (ôr`lēənz –lənz, ôrlēnz`), city (2006 pop. 187,525), coextensive with Orleans parish, SE La., between the Mississippi River and Lake Pontchartrain, 107 mi (172 km) by water from the river mouth; founded  last week.

Quantum mechanics makes statisticalpredictions, and the statistics are most easily understood when applied to ensembles of large numbers--millions, billions--of individuals. Classical mechanics Classical mechanics

The science dealing with the description of the positions of objects in space under the action of forces as a function of time. Some of the laws of mechanics were recognized at least as early as the time of Archimedes (287–212
, which usually governs the macrocosm, makes absolute predictions for individuals. Somewhere, somehow, the two must come together, a serious question that has been largely avoided. Teller suggests that because superconductivity in these high-temperature materials High-temperature materials

A metal or alloy which serves above about 1000°F (540°C). More specifically, the materials which operate at such temperatures consist principally of some stainless steels, superalloys, refractory metals, and certain ceramic
 is accomplished by the action of only a few electrons--far fewer than in the long-known low-temperature form--this may be a place where the statistical and the individual shade into each other.

Electrical conduction of any kind dependson the substance having a supply of electrons that are not tightly bound to given atoms but free to drift through the material. Ordinary metals have such conduction electrons in great abundance, but the new superconducting materials are ceramics with far fewer free electrons in them. As Teller says, "If you put together a barium oxide, a copper oxide and an yttrium oxide and cook them together in the right proportions, you don't get superconductivity. But cook at 950|C for an hour and cool it. The oxygen has gone up from 6.5 to 7. You don't get superconductivity either. Stop a little too soon [so that the proportion of oxygen is 6.9], and you get superconductivity. Anybody can do it.'

The 6,9 means that in an occasional cellof the crystal, on oxygen present in other cells is missing. The omissions seem randomly distributed. This missing oxygen ion leaves behind two electrons, says Teller, and these add crucially to those contributed by other atoms, particularly the copper, to make the superconducting effect go. The oxygens that are present are also critical, as they are the intermediaries that make the electrons behave in a superconducting way.

To get superconductivity, electronsmust cooperate in pairs, called Cooper pairs. The pairs obey a different statistical law from single electrons, making resistanceless passage possible. In low-temperature superconductors the pairs form through an interaction with an acoustical wave in the crystal lattice called a phonon phonon (fō`nŏn), quantum of vibrational energy. The atoms of any crystal are in a state of vibration, their average kinetic energy being measured by the absolute temperature of the crystal. . As an electron proceeds through the crystal, it draws the atomic nuclei toward itself. As it passes, the nuclei move back to their previous position. Thus the lattice ripples as the electron moves along. A proper interaction between two such ripples brings the electrons into a Cooper pair. Characteristically the members of a pair are a few hundred angstroms apart, Teller says.

In the high-temperature superconductors,he suggests, it is not an acoustical vibration of the lattice, but a vibration of oxygen atoms at frequencies characteristic of light--ultraviolet to be precise-- that makes the Cooper pairs. The mobile electrons are particularly those extracted from a certain orbital level of the copper atoms, and they move preferentially in what crystallographers call the y direction, thus accounting for the strong tendency for supercurrents in that direction that experiment has found. These electrons form Cooper pairs with members in adjacent unit cells.

The electrons are not evenly distributed.There is a probability for them to prefer certain locations to others, and these locations form a kind of checker-board three-dimensional pattern through the crystal. The preferred locations along a given line are offset from those in adjacent parallel lines so as to form a stable three-dimensional "superlattice A superlattice is a material with periodically alternating layers of several substances. Such structures possess periodicity both on the scale of each layer's crystal lattice and on the scale of the alternating layers. ,' in which the absolute positions are unknown but the positions relative to each other are known. In this structure the electrons move in "lockstep lock·step  
n.
1. A way of marching in which the marchers follow each other as closely as possible.

2. A standardized procedure that is closely, often mindlessly followed.

Noun 1.
.' A slight disturbance of the superlattice will produce a lot of current for very little energy.

The "optical' quality of the high-temperaturesuperconductivity can make the Josephson effect appear at temperatures above those where resistanceless conduction sets in, Teller proposes. In the Josephson effect a supercurrent su·per·cur·rent  
n.
An electrical current flowing through a superconductor.
 passing through a slightly insulating junction between two superconducting contacts generates a radio wave. Some experimenters have found the Josephson effect at temperatures as high as 260 kelvins in these materials, and some have claimed that the means superconductivity is present. However, actual resistanceless current flow has not been confirmed above 100 K.

Low-temperature superconductors arefully superconducting when the Josephson effect appears. In the high-temperature materials, Teller believes, a combination of the optical frequency of the vibrations and a variation of the photoelectric effect photoelectric effect, emission of electrons by substances, especially metals, when light falls on their surfaces. The effect was discovered by H. R. Hertz in 1887.  can produce a Josephson effect at temperatures above those where true resistanceless flow begins. As Teller puts it, "The electrons are not yet moving in lockstep; conductivity is not yet zero, but a dozen or 100 are correlated'--enough to make a Josephson effect.
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Author:Thomsen, Dietrick E.
Publication:Science News
Date:Jun 6, 1987
Words:793
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