The relationship between the cuprate pseudogap (Δp) and superconducting gap (Δs) remains an unsolved mystery. Here, we present a temperature- and doping-dependent tunneling study of submicron Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+δ intrinsic Josephson junctions, which provides a clear evidence that Δs closes at a temperature Tc0 well above the superconducting transition temperature Tc but far below the pseudogap opening temperature T*. We show that the superconducting pairing first occurs predominantly on a limited Fermi surface near the node below Tc0, accompanied by a Fermi arc due to the lifetime effects of quasiparticles and Cooper pairs. The arc length has a linear temperature dependence, and as temperature decreases below Tc it reduces to zero while pairing spreads to the antinodal region of the pseudogap leading to a d-wave superconducting gap on the entire Fermi surface at lower temperatures.
We present a study of phase escape in surface Bi 2 Sr 2 CaCu 2 O 8+δ intrinsic Josephson junctions in the presence of microwave radiation. The measured switching current distributions display clear double-peak structures in the microwave field, which result from the single-and two-photon resonant escape processes accompanied by microwave-induced potential barrier suppression. We show that these results can be well explained by a quantummechanical model proposed by Fistul et al (2003 Phys. Rev . B 68 060504), from which the power and frequency dependences of the switching current distributions can be reproduced.
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