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Posted

Can someone explain the reaction that occurs between electrons and phonons in a superconductor?

 

I mean, I understood the whole cooper pair thing, but how do phonons come into it?

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

Well, being a superconductor implies no resistance. As electron-phonon interaction is part of electrical resistance (if I remember that correctly) I´d suspect that there´s no interaction with the phonons in a superconductor.

But maybe you could explain about cooper-pairs if you understood them. Because I haven´t understood how two electrons can form a bound state so far.

Posted

Electrons moving through a conductor cause a slight positive charges in the area around it... this +charge can attract another electron. In effect two electrons are then bonded with a certain binding energy.

 

[edit] the electrons have opposite spin, don't know why but they do!

 

As electron-phonon interaction is part of electrical resistance
I have also read that:

'the attractive interaction between electrons (which causes cooper pairs) is brought about indirectly by the interaction between the electrons and phonons.'

but I do not fully understand the why/how of the interaction between electrons and phonons, but then I didn't know what you said (in the quote), so if you don't know the answer to the original question could you expand/explain that please?

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