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The discovery of the Meissner effect led to the phenomenological theory of superconductivity by Fritz and Heinz London in 1935.
This theory explained resistanceless transport and the Meissner effect, and allowed the first theoretical predictions for superconductivity to be made.
However, this theory only explained experimental observations — it did not allow the microscopic origins of the superconducting properties to be identified.
This was done successfully by the BCS theory in 1957, from which the penetration depth and the Meissner effect result.

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