Uncertainties in experiments on strongly-coupled vacuum field modification of superconductivity and ferromagnetism in solids
Abstract
We discuss recent experiments in which fine particles of the organic superconductor Rb3C60 or the cuprate superconductor YBa2Cu3O6+x are held in a polystyrene film that is spin-coated on to a silicon substrate with or without an intervening gold, or another inert metallic layer. From SQUID magnetisation data for Rb3C60 there appears to be a striking and completely unexpected increase in the superconducting transition temperature from 30 to 45~K, which is ascribed to coupling between the electrons in the superconductor and vacuum fluctuations in the electromagnetic field just above the metallic film. We argue that this could be a non-intrinsic effect associated with the presence of solid oxygen in the Pyrex sample tube. We suggest that the ferromagnetic SQUID signal observed for YBa2Cu3O6+x particles in polystyrene could be attributed to ferromagnetic particles or magnetic clusters of unknown origin.
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