In
superconductivity,
Homes's law states that a superconductor's
transition temperature is
proportional to the strength of the superconducting state at
zero temperature (that is, the
superfluid density) multiplied by the above-transition
electrical resistivity. The law is named for
physicist Christopher Homes and was first presented in the
July 29 2004 edition of
Nature.
Homes's law predicts that copper oxide superconductors have high transition temperatures because their above-transition resisitivity is high.
Francis Pratt and Stephen Blundell have shown that Homes's law is violated in the organic superconductors. This work was first presented in Physical Review Letters in March 2005.
See also