This InstituteQ Colloquium features Professor James Analytis from the University of California, Berkeley. The title of his talk is “Entaglement Randomness.”
Professor James Analytis is an experimental physicist who focuses on the discovery and understanding of exotic materials manifesting novel quantum phenomena that have both fundamental and technological implications, particularly superconductors, exotic magnets and topological insulators.
Event details
When: 14:00-15:00, 19.8.2025
Where: Lecture Hall U006, Ekonominaukio 1, 02150 Espoo
Register: Webropol link to register
Host: Aalto University Physics Professor Päivi Törmä
Refreshments are served at 13:45 before the talk.
From James Analytis: What will your talk discuss?
Strongly interacting electrons are the cause of some of the most exotic phenomena in materials, from high temperature superconductivity to the appearance of fractional excitations. Fundamentally, this is due to the interplay of broken symmetry and many-body entanglement. The interplay leads to strange properties, many of which appear to contradict our most basic understanding of the physics of materials. In this talk, I discuss one such challenge, pertaining to the ability of a exotic magnets to store and transport entropy – a fundamental property rooted in the quantum nature of solids. I argue that the resolution comes from the existence of different scales of many-body entanglement, all simultaneously present and randomly distributed.