Abstract

Experimental results for the electronic Raman effect in differently doped cuprate superconductors will be presented. We show that the B2g-symmetry data are generally closely related to ordinary transport and are therefore most likely originating from the carriers, while the response at B1g symmetry cannot be assigned to a specific type of excitations. In the superconducting state the B2g pair breaking peaks scale with the transition temperature over a wide doping range. All results consistently suggest a strong anisotropy of the gap and can be modeled by assuming\(d_{x^2 - y^2 }\) symmetry for the order parameter.

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