Phys.org March 10, 2022 In high-temperature superconductors, at a certain “critical point,” electrons seem to vanish from the Fermi surface map. To understand this phenomenon and engineer that property into some other material that is easier to adopt in technologies, an international team of researchers (USA – Cornell University, UT Austin, National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, Binghamton University, Canada, France, UK) discovered that magnetism is key to understanding the behavior of electrons in “high-temperature” superconductors. They measured the Fermi surface of a copper-oxide high temperature superconductor as a function of electron concentration, right around the critical point and found that […]