Audio / Video

Frontiers in Many-Body Physics of Atoms

  • 01:11:10

Description

I will review recent developments in AMO systems, with emphasis on how they challenge ingrained concepts in many-body physics. First I will consider quantum optical setups, where the non-equilibrium conditions imposed by a laser drive lead to new types of emergent universal behavior. As a concrete example I will show that exciton-polaritons in semiconductor cavities, though much publicized as Bose condensates, actually form a different and more intriguing liquid. Next I will consider ensembles of ultra-cold atoms, which represent nearly perfect realizations of closed quantum systems. Can quantum correlations imprinted in the state of the system survive the many-body time evolution? I will present new insights on the dynamical phase transition from an ergodic phase in which quantum correlations are lost to a many-body localized state in which they persist indefinitely. The nature of this transition lies at the heart of a basic unsolved question concerning the crossover from quantum to classical behavior in macroscopic systems. Before closing I will present progress in confronting the emerging theory of many-body localization with experimental tests.

Details

Title

Frontiers in Many-Body Physics of Atoms

Creator

University of California, Berkeley. Dept. of Physics

Published

Berkeley, CA, University of California, Berkeley, Dept. of Physics, January 26, 2015

Full Collection Name

Physics Colloquia

Type

Video

Format

Lecture.

Extent

1 streaming video file

Other Physical Details

digital, sd., col.

Archive

Physics Library

Note

Recorded at a colloquium held on January 26, 2015, sponsored by the Dept. of Physics, University of California, Berkeley.

originally produced as an .mts file in 2015

Speakers: Altman, Ehud.

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Collection

Physics Colloquia

Tracks

colloquia/1-26-15Altmann.mp4 01:11:10

Linked Resources

View record in Digital Collections.