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Caltech

Physics Research Conference

Thursday, May 8, 2014
4:00pm to 5:00pm
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East Bridge 201 (Richard P. Feynman Lecture Hall)
Controlling superconductivity with light
Alessandra Lanzara, Professor of Physics, UC Berkeley,

After almost twenty years from their discovery, high temperature superconductivity has defied any explanation. One of the reasons is that superconductivity emerges from other competing phases, manifested through the so called pseudogap-state, resulting in a delicate balance that evolves through the phase diagram with doping and temperature. Understanding how this balance takes place is certainly one of the biggest challenges of condensed matter physics today. In this talk I will discuss some of our results in the area of photo-control in high temperature superconductors. I will discuss how superconductivity can be switched on and off through optical excitations, with focus on the complex relationship between pseudogap state and superconductivity.

The implications of these results for the next steps in our quest to understand the fundamental principles underlying the nature of the unconventional superconductivity in novel materials will be discussed.

For more information, please contact Sheri Stoll by phone at 395-6608 or by email at sstoll@caltech.edu or visit http://www.pma.caltech.edu/~physcoll/PhysColl.html.