A long while ago, I brought up the topic of persistent currents in normal metal rings. Please click the link to get the context. The point is, even in a normal metal (as opposed to a superconductor), if you consider a metal ring small enough that the electrons remain quantum mechanically coherent in going about the ring, the electronic wavefunction must remain single-valued. That means that the quantum mechanical phase accumulated by an electron diffusing around the ring back to its starting point (to speak in a semiclassical way) has to add up to an integer multiple of 2 pi. Since magnetic flux through the ring tweaks the accumulated phase (via the Aharonov-Bohm effect), a persistent current develops in the ring to make sure that the total phase (that from the electron motion and that from the resulting Aharonov-Bohm contribution) add up to a multiple of 2 pi. As I'd discussed before, these currents and the magnetic fields they produce tend to be quite small and difficult to detect.
A blog about condensed matter and nanoscale physics. Why should high energy and astro folks have all the fun?
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