The isotope effect in superconductivity
DOI: 10.1063/1.3067418
Ever since Kamerlingh‐Onnes discovered in 1911 that the electrical resistance of mercury abruptly vanished at a temperature just a few degrees above the absolute zero, the phenomenon of superconductivity has presented an intriguing challenge to physicists. Subsequent experiments by Onnes and others definitely established that the resistivity of a superconductor, if at all finite, must be immeasurably small, and less than
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More about the Authors
E. Maxwell. National Bureau of Standards.