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Guy Deutscher | |
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Born | 19.3.1936 Berlin, Germany |
Died | 4.5.2024 Israel |
Citizenship | Israeli, French |
Alma mater | Paris-Sud (Orsay), France |
Known for | Superconductivity, Proximity effects, Solid State Physics, Fluctuations in Granular Superconductors, Ferromagnet-Superconductor Non-Local Boundary Effect, Andreev Reflection into High-Temperature Superconductors |
Awards | Israel Physical Society Fellow (2018), Fellow of the American Physical Society, Fellow of the Institute of Physics (UK), Ordre des Palmes Academiques(1986) and the Legion d'Honneur (1999) |
Scientific career | |
Patrons | Pierre-Gilles de Gennes |
Thesis | Experimental studies of the proximity effects in superconductors |
Doctoral advisor | Pierre-Gilles de Gennes |
Notable students | Zvi Ovadyahu (Hebrew University of Jerusalem), Aharon Kapitulnik (Stanford University), Alexander Palevski (Tel Aviv University), Alexander Gerber (Tel Aviv University), Yossi Lereah (Tel Aviv University), Ralf Krupke (Karlsruhe), Yoram Dagan (Tel Aviv University), Eli Farber (Ariel University), Emil Polturak (Technion), Michael Rappaport (Weizmann Institute of Science), Hector Castro (Bogota, Colombia), Leandro Tessler (Campinas, Brazil), Contents
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Guy Deutscher (March 19, 1936 - May 4, 2024) was an Israeli experimental physicist who specialized in solid-state physics, low-temperature physics, and superconductivity. [1] He was a Professor Emeritus of Physics at Tel Aviv University. [2]
Deutscher was born in Berlin, Germany in 1936. His family fled the Nazis in 1939, shortly before World War II, and settled down (first illegally) in Paris, France. In July 1942, he was arrested with his mother at the “Vel d’Hiv” roundup (la rafle du vélodrome d’hiver). Still, luckily because his father was a French prisoner of war, he escaped the fate of most of the other detainees who were sent to their deaths mainly to Auschwitz. After the war, Deutscher completed his Baccalaureat at Lycée Henri IV in 1953. In 1956, he passed the entrance exam and was accepted into the prestigious École nationale supérieure des mines de Paris, from which he graduated in 1959 with a Diplome d’ingenieur Civil des Mines, specializing in metallurgy. After three years of military service, he joined the research group of Nobel Laureate Pierre-Gilles de Gennes at the university of Paris-Sud (Orsay). The group was later known as the “Orsay group on superconductivity”. It was nicknamed by de Gennes as the four “Musketeers” including Deutscher, E. Guyon, J.P. Burger, and A. Martiner. [3] [4] . Deutscher's doctoral thesis focused on experimental studies of the proximity effects in superconductors.
After spending two years as a postdoc at Rutgers University (1967-8) in the group of Bernie Serin, he returned to France. He was appointed as an associate professor at the University of Paris-Orsay (IUT). In 1971, Deutsche immigrated to Israel and joined the Department of Physics at Tel Aviv University, where he spent his entire career. He developed a new direction of research on experimental low-temperature physics, with particular emphasis on granular superconductors, disordered media, metal-insulator and superconductor-semiconductor transitions properties of thin superconducting films and Josephson junctions. He made significant contributions to the understanding of vortex dynamics in superconductors and the development of superconducting devices. In addition, he worked on granular and disordered materials with an emphasis on the phenomenon of percolation.
Deutscher was a prolific researcher, publishing over 300 scientific papers in leading journals [5] . He was also a dedicated teacher and mentor, supervising numerous graduate students and postdoctoral fellows [6] . Many of his students went on to hold prominent positions in academia and industry in Israel and abroad.
In the 1970s and early 1980s, Deutscher's research group at Tel Aviv University focused on granular and disordered materials. This work involved studying the properties of thin films made from mixtures of metals and insulators. The group's research in this area was highly regarded and led to the publication of an edited book entitled "Percolation, Structures, and Processes" by the Israel Physical Society [7] .
Deutscher's expertise in granular and disordered materials proved invaluable when high-temperature superconductivity was discovered in the late 1980s. He co-authored one of the most cited papers in the field with K. Alex Müller, the Nobel laureate who discovered the cuprate superconductors. This paper explored the relationship between the unique properties of high-temperature superconductivity and the inherent disorder in these materials. Deutscher's insight into the short coherence length of cuprates led to the first accepted explanation for the low critical current in ceramic and polycrystalline samples of these materials.
Deutscher's group also pioneered the use of Andreev reflections to study the electronic properties of high-temperature superconductors. This technique allowed for the measurement of the superconducting gap and provided insights into the nature of the pseudogap in these materials.
Guy Deutscher's scientific contributions [8] , as highlighted in his hallmark papers, span a wide range of topics within solid-state physics and superconductivity. These papers represent significant milestones in his research career and have had a lasting impact on the field.
Deutscher received numerous honors and awards for his contributions to science, including being elected as an IPS fellow in 2018 by the Israel Physical Society "for his leadership in experimental and theoretical research in the theory of superconductivity and in particular the "proximity effect". For his influential contributions to the research on percolation and localization in two dimensions and, for his leadership in building experimental condensed matter physics in Israel" . He was also a Fellow of the American Physical Society and the Institute of Physics (UK). In recognition of his scientific achievements, the French government awarded him the Ordre des Palmes Academiques in 1986 and the rank of Chevalier (knight) of the Legion d'Honneur in 1999.
Deutscher was not only a brilliant scientist but also a dedicated leader and mentor. He served as the director of the Gordon Center for Energy Studies and the Heinrich Hertz Minerva Center for High-Temperature Superconductivity, both at Tel Aviv University. He was also a member of numerous international committees, including the Executive Committee of the International Energy Agency (IEA) Implementing Agreement on High-Temperature Superconductivity.
In his later years, Deutscher continued to be active in research and teaching. He authored several books, including "New Superconductors: From Granular to High Tc" [21] , "The Entropy Crisis" [22] , “Entropy And Sustainable Growth” [23] , “The Climate Debt” [24] . He passed away on May 4th, 2024, leaving behind a beloved family and a legacy of scientific achievement and a profound impact on the field of superconductivity.
In physics, theBardeen–Cooper–Schrieffer (BCS) theory is the first microscopic theory of superconductivity since Heike Kamerlingh Onnes's 1911 discovery. The theory describes superconductivity as a microscopic effect caused by a condensation of Cooper pairs. The theory is also used in nuclear physics to describe the pairing interaction between nucleons in an atomic nucleus.
Superconductivity is a set of physical properties observed in certain materials where electrical resistance vanishes and magnetic fields are expelled from the material. Any material exhibiting these properties is a superconductor. Unlike an ordinary metallic conductor, whose resistance decreases gradually as its temperature is lowered, even down to near absolute zero, a superconductor has a characteristic critical temperature below which the resistance drops abruptly to zero. An electric current through a loop of superconducting wire can persist indefinitely with no power source.
High-temperature superconductors are defined as materials with critical temperature above 77 K, the boiling point of liquid nitrogen. They are only "high-temperature" relative to previously known superconductors, which function at even colder temperatures, close to absolute zero. The "high temperatures" are still far below ambient, and therefore require cooling. The first break through of high-temperature superconductor was discovered in 1986 by IBM researchers Georg Bednorz and K. Alex Müller. Although the critical temperature is around 35.1 K, this new type of superconductor was readily modified by Ching-Wu Chu to make the first high-temperature superconductor with critical temperature 93 K. Bednorz and Müller were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1987 "for their important break-through in the discovery of superconductivity in ceramic materials". Most high-Tc materials are type-II superconductors.
A room-temperature superconductor is a hypothetical material capable of displaying superconductivity at temperatures above 0 °C, which are commonly encountered in everyday settings. As of 2023, the material with the highest accepted superconducting temperature was highly pressurized lanthanum decahydride, whose transition temperature is approximately 250 K (−23 °C) at 200 GPa.
Superconductivity is the phenomenon of certain materials exhibiting zero electrical resistance and the expulsion of magnetic fields below a characteristic temperature. The history of superconductivity began with Dutch physicist Heike Kamerlingh Onnes's discovery of superconductivity in mercury in 1911. Since then, many other superconducting materials have been discovered and the theory of superconductivity has been developed. These subjects remain active areas of study in the field of condensed matter physics.
Indium nitride is a small bandgap semiconductor material which has potential application in solar cells and high speed electronics.
The A15 phases (also known as β-W or Cr3Si structure types) are series of intermetallic compounds with the chemical formula A3B (where A is a transition metal and B can be any element) and a specific structure. The A15 phase is also one of the members in the Frank–Kasper phases family. Many of these compounds have superconductivity at around 20 K (−253 °C; −424 °F), which is comparatively high, and remain superconductive in magnetic fields of tens of teslas (hundreds of kilogauss). This kind of superconductivity (Type-II superconductivity) is an important area of study as it has several practical applications.
In condensed matter physics, a pseudogap describes a state where the Fermi surface of a material possesses a partial energy gap, for example, a band structure state where the Fermi surface is gapped only at certain points.
In superconductivity, a type-II superconductor is a superconductor that exhibits an intermediate phase of mixed ordinary and superconducting properties at intermediate temperature and fields above the superconducting phases. It also features the formation of magnetic field vortices with an applied external magnetic field. This occurs above a certain critical field strength Hc1. The vortex density increases with increasing field strength. At a higher critical field Hc2, superconductivity is destroyed. Type-II superconductors do not exhibit a complete Meissner effect.
Andreev reflection (AR), named after the Russian physicist Alexander F. Andreev, is a type of particle scattering which occurs at interfaces between a superconductor (S) and a normal state material (N). It is a charge-transfer process by which normal current in N is converted to supercurrent in S. Each Andreev reflection transfers a charge 2e across the interface, avoiding the forbidden single-particle transmission within the superconducting energy gap.
Proximity effect or Holm–Meissner effect is a term used in the field of superconductivity to describe phenomena that occur when a superconductor (S) is placed in contact with a "normal" (N) non-superconductor. Typically the critical temperature of the superconductor is suppressed and signs of weak superconductivity are observed in the normal material over mesoscopic distances. The proximity effect is known since the pioneering work by R. Holm and W. Meissner. They have observed zero resistance in SNS pressed contacts, in which two superconducting metals are separated by a thin film of a non-superconducting metal. The discovery of the supercurrent in SNS contacts is sometimes mistakenly attributed to Brian Josephson's 1962 work, yet the effect was known long before his publication and was understood as the proximity effect.
Superconducting wires are electrical wires made of superconductive material. When cooled below their transition temperatures, they have zero electrical resistance. Most commonly, conventional superconductors such as niobium–titanium are used, but high-temperature superconductors such as YBCO are entering the market.
Arthur Foster Hebard is Distinguished Professor of Physics at University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida. He is particularly noted for leading the discovery of superconductivity in Buckminsterfullerene in 1991.
Laura H. Greene is the Marie Krafft Professor of Physics at Florida State University and chief scientist at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory. She was previously a professor of physics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. In September 2021, she was appointed to the President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST).
Aharon Kapitulnik is an Israeli-American experimental condensed matter physicist working at Stanford University. He is known primarily for his work on strongly correlated electron systems, low dimensional electronic systems, unconventional superconductors, topological superconductors, superconductivity and magnetism, transport in bad metals and precision measurements.
John Kenneth Hulm was a British-American physicist and engineer, known for the development of superconducting materials with applications to high-field superconducting magnets. In 1953 with George F. Hardy he discovered the first A-15 superconducting alloy.
Yurii Georgiyovych Naidyuk is a Ukrainian physicist, Director of the B.I. Verkin Institute for Low Temperature Physics and Engineering of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. He is a corresponding member of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine (NASU). He has been awarded the State Prize of Ukraine in Science and Technology and the B. I. Verkin Prize of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. He is the editor-in-chief of the academic journal Low Temperature Physics.
Yvan J. Bruynseraede is a condensed matter experimental physicist, known for his work on multilayers and superlattices, and his interests are thin films, nanostructures, novel materials, magnetism, and superconductivity. He is currently Professor Emeritus at the Catholic University of Leuven (KULeuven), and a member of the Quantum Solid-State Physics Laboratory.
Allen Marshall Goldman is an American experimental condensed matter physicist, known for his research on electronic transport properties of superconductors and for the eponymous Carlson-Goldman mode involving collective oscillations in superconductors.