Competing orders in thermally fluctuating superconductors in two dimensions
- 6 April 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review B
- Vol. 69 (14) , 144504
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevb.69.144504
Abstract
We extend recent low-temperature analyses of competing orders in the cuprate superconductors to the pseudogap regime where all orders are fluctuating. A universal continuum limit of a classical Ginzburg-Landau functional is used to characterize fluctuations of the superconducting order: this describes the crossover from Gaussian fluctuations at high temperatures to the vortex-binding physics near the onset of global phase coherence. These fluctuations induce affiliated corrections in the correlations of other orders, and in particular, in the different realizations of charge order. Implications for scanning tunneling spectroscopy and neutron-scattering experiments are noted: there may be a regime of temperatures near the onset of superconductivity where the charge order is enhanced with increasing temperatures.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 50 references indexed in Scilit:
- How to detect fluctuating stripes in the high-temperature superconductorsReviews of Modern Physics, 2003
- Colloquium: Order and quantum phase transitions in the cuprate superconductorsReviews of Modern Physics, 2003
- Tuning Order in Cuprate SuperconductorsScience, 2002
- Spatially resolved electronic structure inside and outside the vortex cores of a high-temperature superconductorNature, 2001
- Spins in the Vortices of a High-Temperature SuperconductorScience, 2001
- Multiple-spin exchange in a two-dimensional Wigner crystalPhysical Review B, 2000
- Quantum Criticality: Competing Ground States in Low DimensionsScience, 2000
- Stripes defeat the Fermi liquidNature, 2000
- Stripe phases in high-temperature superconductorsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1999
- A Unified Theory Based on SO (5) Symmetry of Superconductivity and AntiferromagnetismScience, 1997