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NCN at Northwestern: Student Leadership Council Seminars

Renormalization Group Theories of Strongly Interacting Electronic Structure

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Contributor(s) Garnet Chan
Cornell University

NCN SLC@Northwestern
Northwestern University, Evanston
Abstract

Our work is in the area of the electronic structure and dynamics of complex processes. We engage in developing new and more powerful theoretical techniques which enable us to describe strong electronic correlation problems.

Of particular theoretical interest are the construction of fast (polynomial) algorithms to solve the quantum many-particle problem, and the treatment of correlation in time-dependent processes.

A key feature of our theoretical approach is the use of modern renormalization group and multi-scale ideas. These enable us to extend the range of simulation from the simple to the complex, and from the small to the very large.

Biography Garnet K.-L. Chan
Assistant Professor,
Department of Chemistry,
Cornell University
BA, University of Cambridge, 1996
PhD, University of Cambridge, 2000
Sponsored by Northwestern University NCN Student Leadership Council
Network for Computational Nanotechnology
Cite this work

If you reference this work in a publication, please cite as follows:

  • Chan, Garnet; SLC@Northwestern, NCN (2007), "Renormalization Group Theories of Strongly Interacting Electronic Structure," http://www.nanohub.org/resources/2616/.

    BibTex | EndNote

Date posted 20 Apr, 2007
Time 2007-04-10 00:00::00
Location Northwestern University, Evanston, IL
Type Online Presentations
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  • 7.4 Ranking Series Part of: NCN at Northwestern: Student Leadership Council Seminars

    NCN at Northwestern: Student Leadership Council Seminars

    Type Series
    Contributor(s) NCN SLC@Northwestern
    Date 05 Nov, 2006
    Avg. Rating 5.0 out of 5 stars  (1)
    Rate this

    This series is organized by NCN students at Northwestern University. Speakers are invited by the Student Leadership Council to visit Northwestern to interact with students and faculty, and to present a research seminar on their research in Computational Nanotechnology. Significant interaction …

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