A.S Alexandrov9780750308366, 0-7503-0836-2
Theory of Superconductivity: From Weak to Strong Coupling leads the reader from basic principles through detailed derivations and a description of the many interesting phenomena in conventional and high-temperature superconductors. The book describes physical properties of novel superconductors, in particular, the normal state, superconducting critical temperatures and critical fields, isotope effects, normal and superconducting gaps, tunneling, angle-resolved photoemission, stripes, and symmetries. The book divides naturally into two parts. Part I introduces the phenomenology of superconductivity, the microscopic BCS theory, and its extension to the intermediate coupling regime. The first three chapters of this part cover generally accepted themes in the conventional theory of superconductivity and serve as a good introduction to the subject. Chapter 4 describes what happens to the conventional theory when the coupling between electrons becomes strong. Part II describes key physical properties of high-temperature superconductors and their theoretical interpretation. Alternative viewpoints are discussed, but the emphasis is placed on the bipolaron theory. |
Table of contents : Contents……Page 6 Preface……Page 10 Introduction……Page 12 1. Phenomenology……Page 18 2. Weak coupling theory……Page 48 3. Intermediate-coupling theory……Page 88 4. Strong-coupling theory……Page 110 5. Competing interactions in unconventional superconductors……Page 176 6. Normal state of cuprates……Page 199 7. Superconducting transition……Page 215 8. Superconducting state of cuprates……Page 227 9. Conclusion……Page 258 Appendix A……Page 259 Appendix B……Page 267 Appendix C……Page 280 Appendix D……Page 289 Appendix E……Page 294 References……Page 298 Index……Page 309 |
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