Electric field inside a Superconductor

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dRic2
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TL;DR
Is electric field inside a superconductor always zero ?
I was reading chapter 3 of this book https://blackwells.co.uk/bookshop/product/Superconductivity-by-James-Arnett/9780198507567, which is a brief introduction to superconductivity. It is stated that inside a superconductor the Electric filed is always zero. This is deduced from the equation ##\mathbf j = \sigma \mathbf E## and taking as an experimental evidence that ##\sigma \rightarrow \infty## for a superconductor (page 51).

What if I apply an external time-varying electric field ? Is ##\mathbf E## still zero ? It would be like the electrons instantaneously move to adapt to the new field... Is is possible ?
 
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Not exactly, but way close enough for most things. Speed of light.
Never forget Admiral Grace Hopper's admonition the a foot corresponds to a nanosecond so unless your conductor is large or frequency high no worries
 
Thanks, just wanted to be sure because the author refers to this property various times in the next pages to prove stuff.