Bogoliubov-Born-Green-Kirkwood-Yvon (BBGKY) hierarchy is a cornerstone of kinetic theory and can be understood as an exact representation of dynamics of many-particle system in terms of correlation functions. For weakly interacting systems, it can be efficiently truncated and leads to the standard results of kinetic theory: Landau and Boltzmann equations. In our work we extend this framework by considering quantum or classical many-body Hamiltonian systems, whose dynamics is given by an integrable, contact interactions, plus weak, long-range, two-body potential. Crucially, such systems are strongly correlated and integrable interactions are treated non-perturbatively. We show how the dynamics of local observables is given in terms of a generalised version of BBGKY hierarchy, which we denote as gBBGKY, which is built for the densities, and their correlations, of the quasiparticles of the underlying integrable model. We benchmark our formalism with exact simulations of long-range interacting hard rod gas. Joint work with Leonardo Biagetti, Miłosz Panfil and Jacopo de Nardis.
room 1.02, Pasteura 5 at 12:15

Jacek Herbrych (Politechnika Wrocławska)
I present a comprehensive analysis of the magnetic excitations and electronic properties of fully quantum double-exchange ferromagnets, i.e., systems where ferromagnetic ordering emerges from the competition between spin, charge, and orbital degrees of freedom, but without the canonical approximation of using classical localized spins. Specifically, I investigate spin excitations within the Kondo lattice-like model, as well as a two-orbital Hubbard Hamiltonian in the orbital-selective Mott phase. Computational analysis of the magnon dispersion, damping, and spectral weight of these models reveal unexpected phenomena, such as magnon mode softening and the anomalous decoherence of magnetic excitations as observed in earlier experimental efforts, but without the need to use phononic degrees of freedom. I show that these effects are intrinsically linked to incoherent spectral features near the Fermi level, which arise due to the quantum nature of the local (on-site) triplet. This incoherent spectrum leads to a Stoner-like continuum on which spin excitations scatter, governing magnon lifetime and strongly influencing the dynamical spin structure factor. By varying the electron density, our study explores the transition from coherent to incoherent magnon spectra. Finally, I will show that this behavior is also present in multi-orbital models with partially filled orbitals, namely in systems without localized spin moments, provided that the model is in a large coupling strength regime.
room 1.02, Pasteura 5 at 12:15

Valentin Leeb (TUM, Munich)
Altermagnetism represents a type of collinear magnetism, that is in some aspects distinct from ferromagnetism and conventional antiferromagnetism. In contrast to standard ferro- and antiferromagnets, altermagnets exhibit extra even-parity wave spin order parameters resulting in a spin splitting of electronic bands in momentum space. I will start with a pedagogical introduction to the altermagnetic symmetry requirements, by studying a simple toy model, which can be realized with ultracold fermionic atoms in optical lattices. However, this and all other current models featuring altermagnetic instabilities, rely on specific lattices with crystallographic sublattice anisotropy. I will show that altermagnetism can also form as an interaction-induced electronic instability in a lattice without such strong symmetry requirements. As proof of principle I will introduce a microscopic example of a two-orbital model demonstrating that the coexistence of antiferromagnetic and staggered orbital order can realize robust altermagnetism. Finally, I will discuss a mechanism for spontaneous altermagnetism in cuprate compounds based on the formation of oxygen moments.