Solving the Mott Problem
ORAL ยท Invited
Abstract
The Mott problem stands as a grand challenge largely because its solution is at the heart of high-temperature superconductivity in the cuprates. It is unfortunate that such materials are largely 2-dimensional and the only exact solutions are restricted to d=1 with Bethe ansatz and infinite dimensions.
I will present a method [1] valid in any dimension that recovers the Bethe ansatz results in $d=1$ and the $d=\infty$ solutions as well. At the heart of the method is the breaking of an overlooked $Z_2$ [2] symmetry of Fermi liquids . I will present benchmarks for the method in d=1 and compare with``accepted'' results in d=2 for the spectral function, occupancy as a function of momentum, the heat capcity and the spin susceptibility.
References:
1.) P.Mai, J. Zhao, G. Tenkila, N. A. Hackner, D. Kush, D. Pan, and P. W. Phillips, https://arxiv.org/abs/2401.08746
2.) E. Huang, G. La Nave, and P. W. Phillips, Nature Physics volume 18, pages511โ516 (2022).
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Publication: P.Mai, J. Zhao, G. Tenkila, N. A. Hackner, D. Kush, D. Pan, and P. W. Phillips, https://arxiv.org/abs/2401.08746
Presenters
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Philip W Phillips
UIUC, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Authors
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Philip W Phillips
UIUC, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
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Erik Van Heumen
University of Amsterdam
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Shiwei Zhang
Simons Foundation (Flatiron Institute), Simons Foundation
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Muqing Xu
Harvard University
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Michel Ferrero
Ecole Polytechnique