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Science Technology

A New Law For Superconductors 53

TaleSlinger sends word of a newly-discovered "mathematical relationship — between material thickness, temperature, and electrical resistance — that appears to hold in all superconductors." The work (abstract), led by Yachin Irvy, comes out of MIT's Research Laboratory of Electronics. Researchers found that a particular superconductor (niobium nitride) didn't fit earlier models estimating the temperature at which it changes from normal conductivity to superconductivity. So the researchers conducted a series of experiments in which they held constant either thickness or “sheet resistance,” the material’s resistance per unit area, while varying the other parameter; they then measured the ensuing changes in critical temperature. A clear pattern emerged: Thickness times critical temperature equaled a constant — call it A — divided by sheet resistance raised to a particular power — call it B. ... The other niobium nitride papers Ivry consulted bore out his predictions, so he began to expand to other superconductors. Each new material he investigated required him to adjust the formula’s constants — A and B. But the general form of the equation held across results reported for roughly three dozen different superconductors.
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A New Law For Superconductors

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  • In Other News (Score:2, Offtopic)

    by NEDHead ( 1651195 )

    A researcher has identified a new social law that describes exactly the probability of getting lucky, which only relies on 17 variables, each of which needs only be adjusted for each pairing of two individuals.

  • And this folks is how you do basic research and why it pays to do it!

  • I don't know anything about the physics of this paper.

    But I love figure 3 (also highlighted at the aps.org URL),
    because it highlights outliers from the theory, and points
    to the supplementary information for theories about why
    those points didn't fit the otherwise nice curve.

    Bringing attention to errors as well as successes - that's
    good honest work.

  • Naming it now to save everyone else the trouble when the Nobel prize gets awarded to this person.

  • WTF? Railroad Super Conductors get preferential treatment over less than stellar ones? What lobbying group managed to get Congress to pass this?

    Oh...wait...

  • So, does this suggest a reasonable upper temperature for superconductivity?

Math is like love -- a simple idea but it can get complicated. -- R. Drabek

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