Modern Optics And Photonics: Atoms And Structured Media


Book Description

This volume is based on the works presented at the conference “Modern Problems in Optics and Photonics-2009”, held in Yerevan Armenia. Covering virtually all actual themes in Optics: Structured media and quantum nanostructures, Quantum optics and quantum information, Spectroscopy and dynamics of atoms, both theoretical and experimental worksare examined and discussed extensively. This volume would capture the interest of experienced scientists as important, original results of 27 leading researchers from Armenia, Australia, Germany, Greece, India, Latvia, Russia, Singapore and United Kingdom are included. Surely, this volume could serve as an advanced textbook for graduate and undergraduate students as it contains not only the original works of prominent authors, but also detailed introductions and descriptions of early results of the presented branches of the optics.




Many Body Structure of Strongly Interacting Systems


Book Description

This carefully edited proceedings volume provides an extensive review and analysis of the work carried out over the past 20 years at the Mainz Microtron (MAMI). This research is centered on the application of Quantum Chromodynamics in the strictly nonperturbative regime at hadronic scales of about 1 fm. The book goes further to offer an outlook on the next wave research, with the forthcoming upgrade of MAMI.










Electronic Structure of Strongly Correlated Materials


Book Description

Electronic structure and physical properties of strongly correlated materials containing elements with partially filled 3d, 4d, 4f and 5f electronic shells is analyzed by Dynamical Mean-Field Theory (DMFT). DMFT is the most universal and effective tool used for the theoretical investigation of electronic states with strong correlation effects. In the present book the basics of the method are given and its application to various material classes is shown. The book is aimed at a broad readership: theoretical physicists and experimentalists studying strongly correlated systems. It also serves as a handbook for students and all those who want to be acquainted with fast developing filed of condensed matter physics.




Phenomena of Interacting Quantum Many-body Systems


Book Description

Strongly correlated electron systems are one of the central topics of condensed matter physics. The myriad of combinations of diverse Fermiologies, phonon spectra and electron-electron, electron-phonon interactions, together with spin-orbit couplings, Kondo couplings, and effects of disorder and external magnetic fields, leads to a truly dazzling range of quantum many-body phenomena. Superconductivity (conventional and unconventional) and magnetism are among the most prominent examples of quantum phases of matter that occur in such systems. We know that powerful emergent principles such as symmetry and topology are required to explain these emergent phenomena. However, due to the inherent difficulty of studying systems with macroscopically large number of strongly interacting particles, there remains the challenge of connecting these somewhat abstract mathematical principles with the underlying microscopic interactions. In this thesis, we illustrate, through two examples of systems with electron-electron and electron-phonon interactions, how one can simplify intractable quantum chemistry problems by reducing them to effective model Hamiltonians that capture the essence of microscopic interactions important to low-energy excitations, which we can then study using a variety of tools, such as determinantal quantum Monte Carlo (DQMC), exact diagonalization, weak and strong coupling considerations and mean-field theory. In the first example we encounter a novel deconfined quantum critical point (DQCP) with emergent O(4) symmetry. In the second example we offer a phenomenological explanation of superconducting and insulating phases of twisted bilayer graphene. Lastly, we also visit the more field-theoretic problem of boson-fermion duality in two spatial dimensions, for which we provide an exact lattice construction. This duality is closely related to the half-filled Landau level problem in quantum Hall physics.