Statistical Physics part 2 - quantum theory (Book)

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Quantum statistical physics is fundamental in the description of superfluid Helium, metals and ordinary conductivity, superconductivity, and other quantum phenomena of matter. One of the initiators of the field was Landau himself, many famous models are named after him. Carrying this on, Philip Anderson coined the name "condensed matter physics" and developed the technique of symmetry breaking and Anderson localization. Anderson's symmetry breaking and the resulting Goldstone-Bosons originated here, despite the fame of the Higgs mechanism in the Electroweak theory that explains how many fundamental particles appear to gain mass.

Statistical Physics Part 2
Landau 9 statistical physics part 2 cover.jpg
Information
Author Lev Landau
Language English
Series Course of Theoretical Physics
Publisher Butterworth-Heinemann
Publication Date 1980
Pages 387
ISBN-13 978-0-75-062636-1

As such, it has already shown to be an important proving grounds both experimentally and theoretically for methods in quantum field theory, and this continues to be the case. Modern problems focus on the engineering of artificial atoms (Quantum Dots), the theory of superconductivity for high critical temperatures (this is not explained by the usual low Tc theory), the Integer and Fractional Quantum Hall Effects; From those come emergent gauge fields, Chern-Simons theory, Topological Quantum Computing, Anyons, the Twisted-Equivariant cohomology classification of topological phases (Kitaev, Freed), and applications of AdS/CFT. Condensed matter, due to this and the immense wealth produced by the development of semiconductors and modern computing devices, is the largest and most active area of physics today.

For resources, Heidelberg University has a Condensed Matter group which focuses on engineering quantum systems: kondo effect in quantum dots, synthetic quantum systems. An exceptional master's student thesis on twisted equivariant cohomology and the 10-fold way/K-theory classification is here. Otherwise, Freed's and Kitaev's ideas will be encountered in their full form in the books here or their papers. Note that Dan Freed works in the developed language of cohomology theories in algebraic topology, changing between geometric methods like those in Spin Geometry and gauge theory, or simplicial methods/spectra from formal algebraic topology. Additionally, David Tong's page contains many online condensed matter/quantum hall effect lecture notes and external resources.

For the following books, Anderson gives speculation as to the actual theory of high Tc, and some philosophy and misgivings about the direction of the field. He has valuable insight. Sachdev helps run a condensed matter group at Harvard, these books by him cover the basic ideas of the quantum hall effect and these further applications to topological field theory, while remaining grounded in the application. The later books are much more mathematical, and follow from the previous topics.

Applications

The Theory of Superconductivity in the High Tc-Cuprates

The Theory of Superconductivity in the High Tc-Cuprates by Philip Anderson.

Quantum Phases of Matter

Quantum Phases of Matter by Subir Sachdev.

Holographic Quantum Matter

Holographic Quantum Matter by Sean Hartnoll, Andrew Lucas, and Subir Sachdev.

Chern-Simons Theory, Matrix Models, and Topological Strings

Chern-Simons Theory, Matrix Models, and Topological Strings by Marcos Marino.

Lectures on Field Theory and Topology

Lectures on Field Theory and Topology by Daniel Freed.

Topological Quantum Computation

Topological Quantum Computation by Zhenghan Wang.