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Markus Greiner [Harvard]

Event Details:

Wednesday, April 8, 2026
11:30am - 1:00pm PDT

Location

Physics and Astrophysics Building
452 Lomita Mall PAB 102/103
Stanford, CA 94305
United States

Abstract: What happens when quantum simulations become cold enough to surprise us? So far, quantum simulations have primarily served as impressive proof-of-principle demonstrations, realizing a wide range of many-body quantum phases. However, temperatures have remained too high to truly access uncharted regimes relevant to strongly correlated quantum materials.  In this talk, I will present a recent breakthrough in which we use an ultracold-atom realization of the Fermi–Hubbard model to explore pseudogap physics in the doped regime. By achieving a several-fold reduction in temperature, we enter a new regime and observe, unexpectedly, a pronounced peak in the compressibility near 1/8 doping. This feature appears to separate a conventional metallic phase from a pseudogap phase. We measure characteristic signatures of a pseudogap in the excitation spectrum and begin to observe the emergence of spin stripe correlations. This work represents a key advance in quantum simulation: it demonstrates that we can now address central open questions in condensed matter physics using controlled experiments in regimes that lie at the frontier of classical numerical methods.

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