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Physics Colloquium Strongly Correlated Electron Systems: a Dynamical Mean Field Theory Perspective
Date: 10/15/2008; 4:00 pm to 5:00 pm Location: 340 West Hall Host Department: Physics
Speaker: Gabi Kotliar, Rutgers University
Detailed Information Correlated electron systems display a plethora of remarkable phenomena ranging from metal to insulator transitions and high temperature superconductivity to anomalous thermoelectricity and volume collapses. They continue to surprise us with their exceptional physical properties and the prospectives for new potential applications. The discovery of interesting strongly correlated compounds was always the result of serendipity, and the application of the Edisonian approach. For example, this year high temperature superconductivity was found in layered materials based on iron arsenides.
From a theoretical perspective correlated electron systems pose one of the most difficult non-perturbative problems in physics. In the past decade there has been significant progress in the description of the electronic structure of correlated materials through the development of the dynamical mean field theory (DMFT) approach. In this colloquium I will introduce the subject of strongly correlated electron systems and DMFT. We will then show some applications of the method to problems previously untractable with other methods. We will conclude with the challenges ahead and the prospective for facing the grand challenge of material design using strongly correlated electron systems.
Contact Information Click here to view the Physics Colloquium schedule.
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