It is known that a superconductor is a material with electrical resistance zero. My question is, it is exactly zero, a theoretical zero, or for practical realistic reasons it is effectively zero?
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Physics theory and experimental reality have something like a mathematical epsilon delta relationship, imo. Here is a review of the matter. From the introduction in the PDF of the paper Resistance in Superconductors:
Some experimental plots are included. |
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Below certain critical thresholds, such as temperature, current, magnetic field and magnetic impurities, the DC resistance is exactly zero. |
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Yes and no. When you get down to certain geometric extremes (1D, 2D), you start to have other effects that result in non-zero resistance (phase slips, vortices). You can effectively think of a bulk superconductor in 0 magnetic field while also below the critical current and temperature as having zero resistance. |
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