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Understanding the field-polarized state that hosts incredibly high-field superconductivity in uranium ditelluride

ORAL · Invited

Abstract

Uranium ditelluride (UTe2) was recently discovered to be a superconductor with a transition temperature of approximately 2 K. Its superconducting state is quite exotic and all evidence to date suggests that it is a spin-triplet superconductor, one of only a few ever discovered. This makes UTe2 interesting both on the basis of fundamental physics and for its potential use in topological qubits that would enable fault-tolerant quantum computing.



Under an applied magnetic field, UTe2 exhibits a number of other unusual behaviors, including a superconducting state that only appears under incredibly high fields of 40 T or greater, and only with field applied in specific directions relative to the crystallographic axes. This superconducting state emerges from a field-polarized magnetic state which we are still in the process of characterizing. I will share recent work in which we explore the transition into that field-polarized state and what it can tell us about the magnetic state itself, as well as the incredibly high-field superconducting state that it hosts.

Presenters

  • Sylvia K Lewin

    National Institute of Standards and Technology

Authors

  • Sylvia K Lewin

    National Institute of Standards and Technology

  • Nicholas P Butch

    National Institute of Standards and Tech

  • Corey E Frank

    National Institute of Standards and Tech

  • John Singleton

    NHMFL/ LANL

  • Laurel E Winter

    Los Alamos National Laboratory

  • Sheng Ran

    Washington University in St. Louis