4.8 Article

Spatially resolved electronic structure inside and outside the vortex cores of a high-temperature superconductor

Journal

NATURE
Volume 413, Issue 6855, Pages 501-504

Publisher

MACMILLAN PUBLISHERS LTD
DOI: 10.1038/35097039

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Puzzling aspects of high-transition-temperature (high-T-c) superconductors include the prevalence of magnetism in the normal state and the persistence of superconductivity in high magnetic fields. Superconductivity and magnetism generally are thought to be incompatible, based on what is known about conventional superconductors. Recent results(1), however, indicate that antiferromagnetism can appear in the superconducting state of a high-T-c superconductor in the presence of an applied magnetic field. Magnetic fields penetrate a superconductor in the form of quantized flux lines, each of which represents a vortex of supercurrents. Superconductivity is suppressed in the core of the vortex and it has been suggested that antiferromagnetism might develop there(2). Here we report the results of a high-field nuclear-magnetic-resonance (NMR) imaging experiment(3-5) in which we spatially resolve the electronic structure of near-optimally doped YBa2Cu3O7-delta inside and outside vortex cores. Outside the cores, we rnd strong antiferromagnetic fluctuations, whereas inside we detect electronic states that are rather different from those found in conventional superconductors.

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