
Final Review 1
Apr 27, 2006
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The quantum stability of a superconductor ensures that electrons can carry current perfectly, without losing energy. There are 2 ingredients to this physics: 1. Electrons pair into "composite bosons"; 2. The bosonic pair...
Lecture 23: Superconductivity is an episode from Solid State Physics by Prof. Carlson. The quantum stability of a superconductor ensures that electrons can carry current perfectly, without losing energy. There are 2 ingredients to this phys...
This episode belongs to Solid State Physics.
Audio availability depends on the podcast feed.
Published Apr 13, 2006.
The quantum stability of a superconductor ensures that electrons can carry current perfectly, without losing energy. There are 2 ingredients to this physics: 1. Electrons pair into "composite bosons"; 2. The bosonic pairs all fall into the same lowest energy wavefunction (called Bose condensation.) Since bosons don't obey the Pauli exclusion principle, they can all occupy the same wavefunction macroscopically -- that's right, you might get 10^23 bosons in the same wavefunction. Once they're there, they're very hard to disturb (that's quantum stability), and in this phase of matter, electrons can carry current without energy loss. We show a video of a magnet levitating over a superconductor (called the Meissner effect), available at Lecture Audio
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Lecture 23: Superconductivity is an episode from Solid State Physics by Prof. Carlson.
The episode duration depends on the source podcast feed and may not always be available.
This episode was published on Apr 13, 2006.
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