There were a couple of interesting and controversial things afoot this week in the condensed matter world.
- There was a new preprint from the group of Prof. Hemley at the University of Illinois Chicago featuring electronic transport measurements in samples of the putative room temperature superconductor made from Lu-N-H, samples synthesized by the group of Ranga Dias. This was mentioned as a potential confirmation of the room temperature superconductivity result by the New York Times. Plotting the full raw data that goes with the new preprint, however, certainly gives many people (including me) pause. The raw resistance vs temperature sweep traces have unphysically narrow (in temperature) drops to and rises from zero, as shown. Obviously I don't know with complete certainty, but this looks exactly like what would be seen if one of the contacts was bad. Time will tell, but the raw data surely look like a flaky contact rather than some weird re-entrant and thermally hysteretic superconductivity.
- Meanwhile, Physical Review did something quite unusual, as they explain in this editorial that ran in Phys Rev B. They allowed the Microsoft Quantum group to publish their latest report about looking for Majorana fermions in superconductor/semiconductor hybrid structures, without giving readers all of the necessary parameters and information necessary for reproducing the work. The rationale is that the community is better served by getting this result into the peer-reviewed literature now even if all of the details aren't going to be made available publicly until the end of 2024. I don't get why the researchers didn't just wait to publish, if they are so worried about those details being available. There has been enough controversy about data availability in the Majorana arena that I don't understand why anyone would invite more discussion about transparency on this. Meanwhile, another group reports related phenomenology, though they argue that due to disorder they are not seeing Majoranas in their devices. A review about the experimental hunt for Majoranas in condensed matter systems also came out this week in Science.