UMD Physicists Play Major Roles in Four of AIP's Top Ten Physics Discoveries of 2008

Editors and science writers at the American Institute of Physics and the American Physical Society selected a list of Top Ten Physics Stories in 2008. The selections were released on December 22, 2008 and included four discoveries in which UMD Physicists had major roles (Large Hadron Collider, Quarks , Ultracold Molecules and Cosmic Rays).

To view the full article, visit: http://www.aip.org/pnu/2008/split/879-1.html

Robert Gluckstern: 1924 - 2008

Bob Gluckstern passed away December 17, 2008.

Bob was a brilliant physicist and superb administrator. He received his PhD from MIT in 1948, was a postdoc/assistant professor/associate professor at Yale until 1964, and a Professor at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, as Chair of the Physics Department for 5 years, and Provost until 1975. He was Chancellor here (the same position is called President now) from 1975 to 1982, when he stepped down to return to full-time teaching and research. He did research in many fields, from early work in coulomb scattering, nucleon scattering, relativistic electrodynamics, to more recent work in accelerator theory and non- linear dynamics. As an aside, he was a long time participant in the Maryland Choir. As another aside, Bob once wrote a paper on how to calculate the uncertainties in the measurement of the curvature (and hence the momentum) of charged tracks in magnetic fields due to multiple scattering and measurement errors. This paper had a huge impact in the field of particle physics.

Bob was an extraordinary physicist who had a pure and deep understanding of the material. In the past few years, true to form, Bob played an important role in the Slawsky clinic. He really enjoyed having contact with the students. Indeed, while Chancellor, he was also a TA in Physics and Math (assisting both Jordan Goodman and Vic Korenman). He was a superb teacher and human being to the end, and he fought a hard fight with cancer. We will miss him, his rich New Yawk accent, his good nature, his perspective, his brilliance, and his friendship.

--Drew Baden, Chair
Obituary in The Washington Post.

Nicholas Hadley Elected Fellow of AAAS

Nicholas Hadley, Professor and Associate Chair of Undergraduate Studies, has been named a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). Election as a Fellow is an honor bestowed upon AAAS members by their peers.

This year 486 members have been awarded this honor by AAAS because of their scientifically or socially distinguished efforts to advance science or its applications. New Fellows will be presented with an official certificate and a gold and blue (representing science and engineering, respectively) rosette pin on Saturday, 14 February from 8 to 10 a.m. at the AAAS Fellows Forum during the 2009 AAAS Annual Meeting in Chicago.

As part of the Section on Physics, Dr. Hadley was elected as an AAAS Fellow for his leadership role in the discovery of the top quark and his contributions to searches for phenomena beyond the standard model of particle physics.

Dr. Hadley joined the University of Maryland as an Associate Professor in 1988. He is an experimental physicist working in the field of High Energy Physics (HEP). Skilled in the development and construction of detectors for the primary observation of charged and neutral particles, he has been very successful in data analysis and physics interpretation of HEP data. He did important work at Brookhaven on rare decays of “strange” particles, published the first paper at the Fermilab Dzero experiment on “leptoquarks,” and spearheaded the analysis efforts at Dzero that led to the discovery of the top quark at Dzero in 1995. He is internationally recognized for his many important leadership roles in the large collaboration of physicists and technical personnel that constitute an active HEP physics experiment, having been on the program advisory committees of Brookhaven and Fermilab, among other leadership positions

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The tradition of AAAS Fellows began in 1874. Currently, members can be considered for the rank of Fellow if nominated by the steering groups of the Association’s 24 sections, or by any three Fellows who are current AAAS members (so long as two of the three sponsors are not affiliated with nominee’s institution) , or by the AAAS chief executive officer. For more information regarding the non-profit AAAS, visit www.aaas.org .

Heavy electrons: new ways to break old rules

By: Johnpierre Paglione



In 1853, well before the discovery of the electron by J. J. Thomson in 1897, two German physicists named Gustav Wiedemann and Rudolf Franz made the peculiar observation that the ratio of electrical to thermal conductivities is the same in several different metals. Although not as famous as the discovery of superconductivity in mercury by Kamerlingh Onnes over fifty years afterward in 1911, this experiment marked one of the first quantitative studies of the inner nature of metals and would turn out to play a pivotal role in guiding the development of the quantum theory of solids. Much effort went into explaining “the law of Wiedemann and Franz”, with the first successful (although fortuitousi) theoretical explanation given by Drude in 1900 in terms of a classical gas of electrons. The advent of quantum mechanics played a crucial role in advancing this interpretation, leading to corrections by Sommerfeld and Bloch in 1928 employing the concept of a Fermi gas of particles that obey quantum mechanical statistics.

While the non-interacting quantum gas picture was quite successful, it was still not obvious how the interactions between ~1023 electrons confined within a small chunk of metal could be completely negligible. This remained a mystery for some time, but the last piece of the puzzle, called Fermi liquid theory, was provided by L. D. Landau in 1957. This theory presented a new way of thinking about the strong interactions present in a system, introducing the notion of “dressed” electrons, or so-called “quasiparticles,” that can be treated as non-interacting particles with the same quantum variables as bare electrons, but with the effects of their interactions buried within renormalized quantities such as their mass. This finally explained the law of Wiedemann and Franz as a simple consequence of having spin ½, charge ‘e’ fermionic particle excitations that transport a set ratio of heat and charge quantities given only by fundamental constants.

In 1975, Fermi liquid theory was put to the test with the discovery of a new class of metals which pushed the quasiparticle idea to the extreme: CeAl3, the first reported “heavy-fermion” system, is one of several metals which harbor quasiparticles with effective masses approaching 1000 times that of the bare electron mass. And yet, these are well described by Landau’s theory; considering this means electrons in these materials are slowed down to the speed of sound, this is truly amazing!  However, the world is not so simple – many other materials exhibit strange metallic properties that do not fit Landau’s picture, and for lack of a better term are often branded as “non-Fermi liquids.” For example, some heavy-fermion systems on the verge of magnetism can be experimentally tuned by applying external pressures or strong magnetic fields to traverse through a zero-temperature phase transition between two stable ground states. Because it occurs at absolute zero temperature, the character of such a “quantum critical point” is dictated by quantum effects rather than the thermal fluctuations that dominate normal phase transitions. More important, the influence of these quantum fluctuations can disrupt the formation of long-lived quasiparticles down to the lowest measured temperatures, some 10,000 degrees below where that occurs (i.e. the Fermi energy) in normal metals, causing electronic masses to appear to diverge toward infinity.

The question is, are these quantum fluctuations simply altering the behavior of quasiparticles in an as-yet misunderstood manner, or have we finally gone well beyond the limits of Landau’s theory? Cut to the law of Wiedemann and Franz: this nice, simple description of spin ½ charge e particles carrying a fixed ratio of heat and charge actually has profound implications. It turns out to be very difficult, so far impossibly soii, to break this relation if you start with Landau’s quasiparticles as an ingredient; being individual entities, they simply carry heat as well as charge. In this light, an experimentally observed violation of this law is considered “smoking gun” evidence for the failure of Fermi liquid theory. Recently, studies of the low-temperature heat and charge conductivities of the heavy-fermion material CeCoIn5 [Tanatar et al., Science 316, 1320 (2007)] have unearthed a violation of the Wiedemann-Franz law as the temperature of the system approaches absolute zero and the ground state is tuned to a quantum critical point. By turning a knob on the magnet power supply, this system can be tuned back and forth between a Fermi liquid ground state, where quasiparticles are well behaved and the Wiedemann-Franz law is obeyed, and a strange metallic state where the WF law does not hold, suggesting that the quasiparticle description has met its match.

Does this behavior mark the death of the quasiparticle and the demise of the Fermi liquid? Oddly, yes and no. It appears that Nature simply refuses to completely abandon Landau’s picture: even when tuned directly to the critical magnetic field, the observed violation in CeCoIn5 only thrives when heat and charge currents are applied along one particular direction of the tetragonal crystalline lattice, and not the other. In other words, it is only under the most stringent conditions that the Wiedemann-Franz law can be forced to break down, making it no surprise that this law has stood for so long. While Gustav and Rudolf may be dismayed to know their law has finally been broken, they would surely be impressed to know that it has been the law of the land for over 150 years. Now that’s an experiment to remember.



i Drude’s published calculation, which treated electrons using classical statistics, was fortuitously wrong by a factor of two.

iiThe WF law remains valid in several extreme theoretical limits, including that of strong disorder and up to the insulator transition.