M University of Minnesota
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School of Physics & Astronomy
116 Church Street S.E.
Minneapolis, MN, 55455
Phone: 612-624-7375
Fax: 612-624-4578
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Condensed Matter Physics

Laura Adams with the scanning tunneling microscope she built for use in the Superconductor Research Group
Photo by Jonathan Chapman

Condensed matter physics, and the closely associated discipline of materials physics, are the largest subfields in physics. Condensed matter research at Minnesota spans a range that includes the strange properties of electricity at nanoscales, to activities that may truly be considered "high science," understanding phenomena such as "superfluids," 3He and 4He.

Condensed matter and materials physics have been the sources of numerous technologies important to daily life. These include compound semiconductor electronics, magnetic and optical storage systems, liquid crystal displays, and semiconductor lasers. Among the many efforts at Minnesota aimed at future technology are the experiments in spintronics, which are attempting to solve problems associated with the coupling of a semiconductor and a ferromagnet. Several of the condensed matter faculty members participate in the Materials Research Science and Engineering Center, a collaborative effort by the University that crosses departmental boundaries.

The condensed matter group at Minnesota investigates a wide range of experimental and theoretical problems in superconductivity and superfluidity, magnetism, mesoscopic physics, liquid crystals, semiconductors, surface physics and complexity.

Condensed Matter Physics Faculty

Charles E. CampbellMagnetism/Quantum Fluids/Condensed Matter/Many-Body Theory/Statistical Mechanics.
Paul CrowellSpin dynamics and transport in ferromagnets and ferromagnet-semiconductor heterostructures.
E. Dan Dahlberg
Eric GanzStudies of Doped Carbon Nanostructures and Metal-Organic Frameworks for Hydrogen Storage
Leonid GlazmanElectron transport and Coulomb interaction in small conducting systems; mesoscopic magnetism and superconductivity; superconductivity of layered structures, particularly of high-Tc materials.
Allen GoldmanProperties of superconductors and selected magnetic materials in the configuration of thin films.
J. Woods HalleyCondensed matter and chemical physics theory, simulation and experiment with an emphasis on interfaces.
Cheng-Cher Huang
James KakaliosExperimental Condensed Matter: Amorphous Semiconductors, Fluctuation Phenomena in Neurological Systems, Segregation in Granular Media
Alex Kamenev Theoretical condensed matter physics, disordered systems and glasses, field-theoretical treatment of many-body systems, mesoscopic systems, out of equilibrium systems
Boris Shklovskii
Oriol T. Valls
Michael ZudovNon-equlibrium transport properties of quantum Hall systems
William Zimmermann

Related Links

Materials Research Science and Engineering Center