Electron-boson glue function derived from electronic Raman scattering
arXiv:1009.1085 · doi:10.1088/0953-8984/22/37/375702
Abstract
Raman scattering cross sections depend on photon polarization. In the cuprates nodal and antinodal directions are weighted more strongly in $B_{2g}$ and $B_{1g}$ symmetry, respectively. On the other hand in angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES), electronic properties are measured along well-defined directions in momentum space rather than their weighted averages. In contrast, the optical conductivity involves a momentum average over the entire Brillouin zone. Newly measured Raman response data on high-quality Bi$_2$Sr$_2$CaCu$_2$O$_{8+δ}$ single crystals up to high energies have been inverted using a modified maximum entropy inversion technique to extract from $B_{1g}$ and $B_{2g}$ Raman data corresponding electron-boson spectral densities (glue) are compared to the results obtained with known ARPES and optical inversions. We find that the $B_{2g}$ spectrum agrees qualitatively with nodal direction ARPES while the $B_{1g}$ looks more like the optical spectrum. A large peak around $30 - 40\,$meV in $B_{1g}$, much less prominent in $B_{2g}$, is taken as support for the importance of $(Ï,Ï)$ scattering at this frequency.
7 pages, 3 figures