Strongly Correlated Electrons
Heavy fermions, Mott insulators, and Hubbard-model phenomenology beyond mean field.
Strongly Correlated Electrons is a topic within condensed matter physics. Heavy fermions, Mott insulators, and Hubbard-model phenomenology beyond mean field. The area sits at the intersection of foundational theory and active research practice, and its methodology is shaped by a small set of canonical references that frame how problems are posed, how results are validated, and what counts as progress.
Foundational references
The primary references for this topic establish the conceptual core and the standard problem set.
Many-Particle Physics (Mahan, 2000) is treated here as a primary reference for this area; its presentation of the subject is the canonical entry point for learners moving from prerequisites into independent work on strongly correlated electrons.
Open methodological questions in strongly correlated electrons include the precise scope of validity of the current dominant techniques, the integration of newer computational or experimental tools, and how this topic connects to neighbouring areas in the tree. Subsequent waves of editing will deepen these connections and add fresh frontier references as the literature evolves.
Prerequisites
Sources
- textbook · primary · 2000Many-Particle Physicsmahan-2000
In context
Where this topic sits in the prerequisite graph. Click any node to jump.