Conical Intersections in Physics von Jonas Larson | An Introduction to Synthetic Gauge Theories | ISBN 9783030348823

Conical Intersections in Physics

An Introduction to Synthetic Gauge Theories

von Jonas Larson, Erik Sjöqvist und Patrik Öhberg
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinJonas Larson
Autor / AutorinErik Sjöqvist
Autor / AutorinPatrik Öhberg
Buchcover Conical Intersections in Physics | Jonas Larson | EAN 9783030348823 | ISBN 3-030-34882-2 | ISBN 978-3-030-34882-3

Conical Intersections in Physics

An Introduction to Synthetic Gauge Theories

von Jonas Larson, Erik Sjöqvist und Patrik Öhberg
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinJonas Larson
Autor / AutorinErik Sjöqvist
Autor / AutorinPatrik Öhberg

This concise book introduces and discusses the basic theory of conical intersections with applications in atomic, molecular and condensed matter physics.

Conical intersections are linked to the energy of quantum systems. They can occur in any physical system characterized by both slow and fast degrees of freedom - such as e. g. the fast electrons and slow nuclei of a vibrating and rotating molecule - and are important when studying the evolution of quantum systems controlled by classical parameters. Furthermore, they play a relevant role for understanding the topological properties of condensed matter systems.

Conical intersections are associated with many interesting features, such as a breakdown of the Born-Oppenheimer approximation and the appearance of nontrivial artificial gauge structures, similar to the Aharonov-Bohm effect.

Some applications presented in this book include

- Molecular Systems: some molecules in nonlinear nuclear configurations undergo Jahn-Teller distortions under which the molecule lower their symmetry if the electronic states belong to a degenerate irreducible representation of the molecular point group.

- Solid State Physics: different types of Berry phases associated with conical intersections can be used to detect topologically nontrivial states of matter, such as topological insulators, Weyl semi-metals, as well as Majorana fermions in superconductors.

- Cold Atoms: the motion of cold atoms in slowly varying inhomogeneous laser fields is governed by artificial gauge fields that arise when averaging over the fast internal degrees of freedom of the atoms. These gauge fields can be Abelian or non-Abelian, which opens up the possibility to create analogs to various relativistic effects at low speed.