QPT Conference QPT Blog: week 1 | week 2 | week 3 | week 4 | week 5 | week 6 | week 7 | week 8 | week 9 | week 10 | week 11 | week 12 | week 13 | week 14 | week 15 | week 16

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Field induced
Quantum phase transitions in URu2Si2
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High
temperature supercondivity
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Field induced
phase transition in YbRh2Si2
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Linear
resistivity to 1000K
in La2CuO4
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Quantum phase transitions take place when quantum matter becomes
unstable to a new, ordered ground-state. A growing body of
experimental work on quantum phase transitions, in a wide variety of
matter, including highly correlated metals, high temperature
superconductors, quantum magnets and Bose Einstein fluids, indicates
that fundamentally new physics can develop in the vicinity of quantum
phase transitions. Second order quantum phase transitions lead to the
phenomenon of "quantum criticality". Although a quantum critical point
lies at absolute zero, it forms a kind of naked singularity in the
material phase diagram, and a wide region of the fintie temperature
phase diagram develops novel properties. Quantum critical metals
develop transport and thermodynamic properties that deviate
fundamentally from the properties of conventional metals.
This workshop will address the problem of quantum phase transitions, and the breakdown of Fermi liquid theory near such transitions. The workshop will provide an ideal setting to bring together a variety of theorists and experimentalists working in the field of quantum criticality, with the underlying goal of understanding the nature of quantum phase transitions and why standard approaches in many cases fail to explain the observed physics.
To help establish a sense of continuity in the meeting, and to provide
some kind of instutitional memory whereby participants can look back at
discussions of previous weeks,we are implementing a weekly "Blog".
The blogger will provide a brief diary of |