1h 18 min

Sommerfeld Theory Colloquium: Quantum Matter with Strong Correlations Sommerfeld Lecture Series (ASC)

    • Ciência

From copper-oxide superconductors to rare-earth compounds, materials with strong electronic correlations have focused enormous attention over the last two decades. Solid-state chemistry, new elaboration techniques and improved experimental probes are constantly providing us with examples of novel materials with surprising electronic properties, the latest example being the recent discovery of iron-based high-temperature superconductors.
In this colloquium, I will emphasize that the classic paradigm of solid-state physics, in which electrons form a gas of wave-like quasiparticles, must be seriously revised for strongly correlated materials. Instead, a description accounting for both atomic-like excitations in real-space and quasiparticle excitations in momentum space is requested. I will review how Dynamical Mean-Field Theory -an approach that has led to significant advances in our understanding of strongly correlated materials- fulfills this goal.
New frontiers are also opening up, which bring together condensed-matter physics and quantum optics. `Artificial materials' made of ultra-cold atoms trapped by laser beams can be engineered with a remarkable level of controllability, and allow for the study of strong- correlation physics in previously unexplored regimes.

From copper-oxide superconductors to rare-earth compounds, materials with strong electronic correlations have focused enormous attention over the last two decades. Solid-state chemistry, new elaboration techniques and improved experimental probes are constantly providing us with examples of novel materials with surprising electronic properties, the latest example being the recent discovery of iron-based high-temperature superconductors.
In this colloquium, I will emphasize that the classic paradigm of solid-state physics, in which electrons form a gas of wave-like quasiparticles, must be seriously revised for strongly correlated materials. Instead, a description accounting for both atomic-like excitations in real-space and quasiparticle excitations in momentum space is requested. I will review how Dynamical Mean-Field Theory -an approach that has led to significant advances in our understanding of strongly correlated materials- fulfills this goal.
New frontiers are also opening up, which bring together condensed-matter physics and quantum optics. `Artificial materials' made of ultra-cold atoms trapped by laser beams can be engineered with a remarkable level of controllability, and allow for the study of strong- correlation physics in previously unexplored regimes.

1h 18 min

Top podcasts em Ciência

Ciência Sem Fim
Estúdios Flow
Ciência Suja
Ciência Suja
Naruhodo
B9, Naruhodo, Ken Fujioka, Altay de Souza
Ta de Clinicagem
tadeclinicagem
Sinapse
Ciência Todo Dia
O Tempo Virou
Giovanna Nader

Mais de Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München

MCMP
MCMP Team
LMU Rechtsphilosophie
Prof. Dr. jur. Dr. jur. h.c. mult. Bernd Schünemann
LMU Grundkurs Zivilrecht I - Lehrstuhl für Bürgerliches Recht, Internationales Privatrecht und Rechtsvergleichung
Professor Dr. Stephan Lorenz
LMU Grundkurs Strafrecht I (L-Z) WS 2014/15
Prof. Dr. jur. Helmut Satzger
GK Strafrecht II (A-K) SoSe 2020 Satzger
Helmut Satzger
NANO-BIO-PHYSICS SYMPOSIUM 07.09.2019 Day 2
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München