Physics:Quantum methods/many-body

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Many-body theory studies quantum systems consisting of a large number of interacting particles.

Many-body systems exhibit collective behavior not present in single-particle systems.

Overview

Exact solutions are usually impossible, requiring approximation methods such as perturbation theory and numerical techniques.

Key concepts

  • Collective excitations
  • Quasiparticles
  • Emergent phenomena

Applications

Condensed matter physics, nuclear physics, and quantum computing.

See also

Table of contents (185 articles)

Index

Full contents

9. Quantum optics and experiments (5) ↑ Back to index
14. Plasma and fusion physics (8) ↑ Back to index
Conceptual illustration of plasma physics in a fusion context, showing magnetically confined ionized gas in a tokamak and the collective behavior governed by electromagnetic fields and transport processes.
Conceptual illustration of plasma physics in a fusion context, showing magnetically confined ionized gas in a tokamak and the collective behavior governed by electromagnetic fields and transport processes.

References


Author: Harold Foppele

Source attribution: Physics:Quantum Many-body theory