论文标题
清洁多波段超导体中的光学响应理论
Theory of optical responses in clean multi-band superconductors
论文作者
论文摘要
超导体中的电磁反应提供了有关配对对称性以及物理量(例如超流体密度)的有价值信息。然而,在超导差距量表上,在势头保持势头时,在常规的bardeen-cooper-schrieffer超导体中禁止Bogoliugov准粒子的光激发。因此,Mattis和Bardeen在肮脏的限制理论的框架内已经理解了远红外的光学响应已有60多年了。 Here we show, by investigating the selection rules imposed by particle-hole symmetry and unitary symmetries, that intrinsic momentum-conserving optical excitations can occur in clean multi-band superconductors when one of the following three conditions is satisfied: (i) inversion symmetry breaking, (ii) symmetry protection of the Bogoliubov Fermi surfaces, or (iii) simply finite spin-orbit coupling with不间断的时间逆转和反转对称性。该结果表明,除了倒置对称性的直接情况外,清洁限制的光学响应是常见的。我们将理论应用于FESE的光学响应,FESE是一种带有反转对称性和显着的自旋轨道耦合的干净多波段超导体。该结果为研究清洁限制超导体通过光学测量铺平了道路。
Electromagnetic responses in superconductors provide valuable information on the pairing symmetry as well as physical quantities such as the superfluid density. However, at the superconducting gap energy scale, optical excitations of the Bogoliugov quasiparticles are forbidden in conventional Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer superconductors when momentum is conserved. Accordingly, far-infrared optical responses have been understood in the framework of a dirty-limit theory by Mattis and Bardeen for over 60 years. Here we show, by investigating the selection rules imposed by particle-hole symmetry and unitary symmetries, that intrinsic momentum-conserving optical excitations can occur in clean multi-band superconductors when one of the following three conditions is satisfied: (i) inversion symmetry breaking, (ii) symmetry protection of the Bogoliubov Fermi surfaces, or (iii) simply finite spin-orbit coupling with unbroken time reversal and inversion symmetries. This result indicates that clean-limit optical responses are common beyond the straightforward case of broken inversion symmetry. We apply our theory to optical responses in FeSe, a clean multi-band superconductor with inversion symmetry and significant spin-orbit coupling. This result paves the way for studying clean-limit superconductors through optical measurements.