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The pseudogap: friend or foe of high T c ?
Journal article

The pseudogap: friend or foe of high T c ?

Abstract

Although nineteen years have passed since the discovery of high temperature cuprate superconductivity 1, there is still no consensus on its physical origin. This is in large part because of a lack of understanding of the state of matter out of which the superconductivity arises. In optimally and underdoped materials, this state exhibits a pseudogap at temperatures large compared to the superconducting transition temperature 2, 3. Although discovered only three years after the pioneering work of Bednorz and Müller, the physical origin of this pseudogap behavior and whether it constitutes a distinct phase of matter is still shrouded in mystery. In the summer of 2004, a band of physicists gathered for five weeks at the Aspen Center for Physics to discuss the pseudogap. In this perspective, we would like to summarize some of the results presented there and discuss the importance of the pseudogap phase in the context of strongly correlated electron systems.

Authors

Norman MR; Pines D; Kallin C

Journal

Advances In Physics, Vol. 54, No. 8, pp. 715–733

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Publication Date

December 1, 2005

DOI

10.1080/00018730500459906

ISSN

0001-8732

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