Probing the superconducting condensate on a nanometer scale

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Published 22 February 2006 2006 EDP Sciences
, , Citation Th. Proslier et al 2006 EPL 73 962 DOI 10.1209/epl/i2005-10488-0

0295-5075/73/6/962

Abstract

Superconductivity is a rare example of a quantum system in which the wave function has a macroscopic quantum effect, due to the unique condensate of electron pairs. The amplitude of the wave function is directly related to the pair density, but both amplitude and phase enter the Josephson current: the coherent tunneling of pairs between superconductors. Very sensitive devices exploit the superconducting state, however properties of the condensate on the local scale are largely unknown, for instance, in unconventional high-Tc cuprate, multiple gap, and gapless superconductors. The technique of choice would be Josephson STS, based on Scanning Tunneling Spectroscopy (STS), where the condensate is directly probed by measuring the local Josephson current (JC) between a superconducting tip and sample. However, Josephson STS is an experimental challenge since it requires stable superconducting tips, and tunneling conditions close to atomic contact. We demonstrate how these difficulties can be overcome and present the first spatial mapping of the JC on the nanometer scale. The case of an MgB2 film, subject to a normal magnetic field, is considered.

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