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  1. About. In general, I am interested in strongly-interacting quantum many-body condensed-matter systems, explored by non-perturbative methods: Geometry of the fractional quantum Hall effect (FQHE): The FQHE occurs when the kinetic energy of electrons bound to a 2D surface becomes quantized in the presence of a high magnetic fields when they move ...

  2. Duncan Haldane. professor of physics at Princeton University. F. Duncan M. Haldane under presskonferens i Stockholm, december 2016. Upload media. Wikipedia. Name in native language. Frederick Duncan Michael Haldane. Date of birth. 14 September 1951.

  3. F. Duncan M. Haldane is a condensed matter theorist who is known for work on exotic quantum states of matter, including low-dimensional quantum magnetism and the quantum Hall effect, and their entanglement properties. He shared the 2016 Nobel Prize for Physics for his work on “topological phases of matter”. Haldane was born in London, England, and graduated from the University of Cambridge ...

  4. 9. Mai 2024 · semiconductor. Duncan Haldane (born September 14, 1951, London, England) is a British-born American physicist who was awarded the 2016 Nobel Prize in Physics for his work on explaining properties of one-dimensional chains of atomic magnets and of two-dimensional semiconductors. He shared the prize with British-born American physicists David ...

  5. In general, I am interested in strongly-interacting quantum many-body condensed-matter systems, explored by non-perturbative methods: Geometry of the fractional quantum Hall effect (FQHE): The FQHE occurs when the kinetic energy of electrons bound to a 2D surface becomes quantized in the presence of a high magnetic fields when they move in Lan...

  6. Topological Quantum Matterby F. Duncan M. HaldanePrinceton University, Princeton, NJ, USAF. Duncan M. Haldane delivered his Nobel Lecture on 8 December 2016 ...

    • 52 Min.
    • 16K
    • Nobel Prize
  7. Abstract. F. Duncan M. Haldane is the Eugene Higgins Professor of Physics at Princeton University (1990-present). His other institutional affiliations include University of Southern California and University of California, San Diego. His research interests include the theory of Luttinger liquids and the Fractional Quantum Hall Effect.