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Exciton dynamics uncovering electron fractionalization in superconducting cuprates

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arxiv 2207.12352 v2 pith:2VW2X7TB submitted 2022-07-25 cond-mat.str-el

Exciton dynamics uncovering electron fractionalization in superconducting cuprates

classification cond-mat.str-el
keywords superconductingcuprateselectronfractionalizationpseudogapcrucialenergyexcitons
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Electron quasiparticles play a crucial role in simplifying the description of many-body physics in solids with surprising success. Conventional Landau's Fermi-liquid and quasiparticle theories for high-temperature superconducting cuprates have, however, received skepticism from various angles. A path-breaking framework of electron fractionalization has been established to replace the Fermi-liquid theory for systems that show the fractional quantum Hall effect and the Mott insulating phenomena; whether it captures the essential physics of the pseudogap and superconducting phases of cuprates is still an open issue. Here, we show that excitonic excitation of optimally doped Bi$_2$Sr$_2$CaCu$_2$O$_{8+\delta}$ with energy far above the superconducting-gap energy scale, about 1 eV or even higher, is unusually enhanced by the onset of superconductivity. Our finding proves the involvement of such high-energy excitons in superconductivity. Therefore, the observed enhancement in the spectral weight of excitons imposes a crucial constraint on theories for the pseudogap and superconducting mechanisms. A simple two-component fermion model which embodies electron fractionalization in the pseudogap state well explains the change, pointing toward a novel route for understanding the electronic structure of superconducting cuprates.

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