Physics, asked by goodvibesonly3778, 10 months ago

How does specific heat vary with temperature of superconductors?

Answers

Answered by sankar007
1

The electronic specific heat (Ce) of the electrons is defined as the ratio of that portion of the heat used by the electrons to the rise in temperature of the system. ... Some of the high-Tc superconductors provide an additional contribution to the specific heat, which is proportional to the temperature.

Answered by itzYourKamina
7

Answer:

The p-wave superconductivity is a phase of matter where produces when the electrons are bounded with parallel spins by exchange of the electronic excitations with angular momentum ℓ = 1 and condense in a triplet state.

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