Physicists show standard 'quasiparticle' theory breaks down at 'quantum critical point'
Wednesday, April 25, 2012 - 14:00
in Physics & Chemistry
A new study this week finds that "quantum critical points" in exotic electronic materials can act much like polarizing "hot button issues" in an election. Reporting in Nature, researchers from Rice University, two Max Planck Institutes in Dresden, Germany, and UCLA find that on either side of a quantum critical point, electrons fall into line and behave as traditionally expected, but at the critical point itself, traditional physical laws break down.