YoVDO

Moire-trapped Excitons and Quadrapolar Excitons

Offered By: International Centre for Theoretical Sciences via YouTube

Tags

Condensed Matter Physics Courses Quantum Optics Courses 2D Materials Courses Van der Waals Heterostructures Courses Twisted Bilayers Courses

Course Description

Overview

Save Big on Coursera Plus. 7,000+ courses at $160 off. Limited Time Only!
Explore the fascinating world of quantum materials in this 59-minute lecture on Moire-trapped Excitons and Quadrapolar Excitons delivered by Kausik Majumdar at the International Centre for Theoretical Sciences. Delve into the cutting-edge research on engineered 2D quantum materials, focusing on emergent electronic, magnetic, and topological phenomena in two-dimensional synthetic structures. Discover how reduced dimensionality and frustrated coupling across 2D interfaces lead to new electronic band structures and host emergent behaviors. Gain insights into topics such as magnetism, topological superconductivity, flat bands, correlated phenomena in twisted van der Waals heterostructures, and quantum simulators using engineered 2D materials. Enhance your understanding of the interplay between electronic correlations, spin-orbit coupling, crystal structure, symmetry, and topology in quantum materials.

Syllabus

Moire-trapped Excitons and Quadrapolar Excitons by Kausik Majumdar


Taught by

International Centre for Theoretical Sciences

Related Courses

Casimir Force Between Weyl Semimetals in a Chiral Medium - Maria Belen Farias
Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics via YouTube
Polarized Thermal Emission from Metamaterials Described by Stokes Parameters Based on Fluctuational Electrodynamics - Zhuomin Zhang
Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics via YouTube
Probing the Screening of the Casimir Interaction with Optical Tweezers - Paulo Maia Neto
Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics via YouTube
Pico-Electrodynamics Inside Matter - Zubin Jacob
Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics via YouTube
Casimir Metrology and the Casimir Energy - David Bishop
Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics via YouTube