Page 3: Research news on Strongly correlated systems

Strongly correlated systems are physical systems in which electron–electron (or more generally particle–particle) interactions are comparable to or larger than their kinetic energy, invalidating independent-particle or mean-field descriptions. In such systems, many-body effects dominate, leading to emergent phenomena such as Mott insulating behavior, unconventional superconductivity, non-Fermi-liquid states, heavy-fermion behavior, and complex magnetic orders. Their theoretical treatment typically requires beyond-perturbative methods, including dynamical mean-field theory, quantum Monte Carlo, tensor-network approaches, and exact diagonalization. Strong correlations are central in materials such as transition-metal oxides, cuprates, organics, and ultra-cold atomic gases engineered to simulate lattice models like the Hubbard or t–J models.

Explaining a quantum oddity with five atoms 

Matter gets weird at the quantum scale, and among the oddities is the Efimov effect, a state in which the attractive forces between three or more atoms bind them together, even as they are excited to higher energy levels, ...

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