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Magnetic field expulsion in optically driven YBa2Cu3O6.48

35

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27

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2024

Year

Abstract

Coherent optical driving in quantum solids is emerging as a research frontier, with many reports of interesting non-equilibrium quantum phases<sup>1-4</sup> and transient photo-induced functional phenomena such as ferroelectricity<sup>5,6</sup>, magnetism<sup>7-10</sup> and superconductivity<sup>11-14</sup>. In high-temperature cuprate superconductors, coherent driving of certain phonon modes has resulted in a transient state with superconducting-like optical properties, observed far above their transition temperature T<sub>c</sub> and throughout the pseudogap phase<sup>15-18</sup>. However, questions remain on the microscopic nature of this transient state and how to distinguish it from a non-superconducting state with enhanced carrier mobility. For example, it is not known whether cuprates driven in this fashion exhibit Meissner diamagnetism. Here we examine the time-dependent magnetic field surrounding an optically driven YBa<sub>2</sub>Cu<sub>3</sub>O<sub>6.48</sub> crystal by measuring Faraday rotation in a magneto-optic material placed in the vicinity of the sample. For a constant applied magnetic field and under the same driving conditions that result in superconducting-like optical properties<sup>15-18</sup>, a transient diamagnetic response was observed. This response is comparable in size with that expected in an equilibrium type II superconductor of similar shape and size with a volume susceptibility χ<sub>v</sub> of order -0.3. This value is incompatible with a photo-induced increase in mobility without superconductivity. Rather, it underscores the notion of a pseudogap phase in which incipient superconducting correlations are enhanced or synchronized by the drive.

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