Using state-of-the-art magnetic imaging, researchers from Cornell University, the Kavli Institute at Cornell for Nanoscale Science, the University of North Dakota, and The Ohio State University have, for the first time, characterized a key property of the superconducting state of a class of atomically thin materials that are too difficult to measure due to their minuscule size. The group's superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) revealed that the material was expelling the device's magnetic field. "Seeing magnetic field expulsion, in combination with very low resistance, is a really clear signature that something is a superconductor," said Alexander Jarjour, one of the researchers involved in this study.
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