Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hubbard_model> ?p ?o }
- Hubbard_model abstract "The Hubbard model is an approximate model used, especially in solid state physics, to describe the transition between conducting and insulating systems. The Hubbard model, named after John Hubbard, is the simplest model of interacting particles in a lattice, with only two terms in the Hamiltonian (see example below): a kinetic term allowing for tunneling ('hopping') of particles between sites of the lattice and a potential term consisting of an on-site interaction. The particles can either be fermions, as in Hubbard's original work, or bosons, when the model is referred to as either the 'Bose–Hubbard model' or the 'boson Hubbard model'.The Hubbard model is a good approximation for particles in a periodic potential at sufficiently low temperatures that all the particles are in the lowest Bloch band, as long as any long-range interactions between the particles can be ignored. If interactions between particles on different sites of the lattice are included, the model is often referred to as the 'extended Hubbard model'.The model was originally proposed (in 1963) to describe electrons in solids and has since been the focus of particular interest as a model for high-temperature superconductivity. More recently, the Bose–Hubbard model has been used to describe the behavior of ultracold atoms trapped in optical lattices. Recent ultracold atom experiments have also realised the original, fermionic Hubbard model in the hope that such experiments could yield its phase diagram.For electrons in a solid, the Hubbard model can be considered as an improvement on the tight-binding model, which includes only the hopping term. For strong interactions, it can give qualitatively different behavior from the tight-binding model, and correctly predicts the existence of so-called Mott insulators, which are prevented from becoming conducting by the strong repulsion between the particles.".
- Hubbard_model wikiPageExternalLink v=onepage&q&f=false.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageID "1702398".
- Hubbard_model wikiPageLength "12747".
- Hubbard_model wikiPageOutDegree "66".
- Hubbard_model wikiPageRevisionID "681783197".
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Absolute_zero.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Anderson_impurity_model.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Atomic_number.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Atomic_orbital.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Auxiliary_field_Monte_Carlo.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Band_theory.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Bethe_ansatz.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Bloch_wave.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Bose–Hubbard_model.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Boson.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Bosons.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Category:Condensed_matter_physics.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Category:Lattice_models.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Category:Quantum_Lattice_models.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Category:Quantum_chemistry.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Charge_transfer_insulators.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Conductor_(material).
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Correlation_function_(statistical_mechanics).
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Crystal.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Crystal_structure.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Dynamical_mean_field_theory.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Electrical_conductor.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Electrical_insulation.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Electronic_band_structure.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Elliott_H._Lieb.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Fermion.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Fermions.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Greens_function.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Hamiltonian_(quantum_mechanics).
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink High-temperature_superconductivity.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Hydrogen_atom.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Insulator_(electricity).
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink John_Hubbard_(physicist).
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Journal_of_Statistical_Physics.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Lanczos_algorithm.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Lattice_constant.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Lattice_parameter.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Magnetic_moment.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Metal.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Mott_insulator.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Numerical_sign_problem.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Optical_lattice.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Pauli_exclusion_principle.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Physica_(journal).
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Physica_A.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Proceedings_of_the_Royal_Society.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Proceedings_of_the_Royal_Society_of_London.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Pyrochlore.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Quantum_entanglement.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Quantum_tunneling.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Quantum_tunnelling.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Rare_earth_element.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink S-matrix.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Second_quantization.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Sign_problem.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Solid-state_physics.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Solid_state_physics.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Spectral_density.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Spectral_function.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Spin_(physics).
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Springer_(publisher).
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Springer_Science+Business_Media.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Stoner_criterion.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink T-J_model.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Thermodynamic.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Thermodynamics.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Tight_binding.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Ultracold_atom.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLink Yangian.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLinkText "Hubbard U".
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLinkText "Hubbard model".
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLinkText "Hubbard".
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLinkText "Hubbard-like models".
- Hubbard_model wikiPageWikiLinkText "lattice system".
- Hubbard_model hasPhotoCollection Hubbard_model.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_arXiv.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_journal.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Four-fermion_interactions.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Use_dmy_dates.
- Hubbard_model wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:When.
- Hubbard_model subject Category:Condensed_matter_physics.
- Hubbard_model subject Category:Lattice_models.
- Hubbard_model subject Category:Quantum_Lattice_models.
- Hubbard_model subject Category:Quantum_chemistry.
- Hubbard_model hypernym Model.
- Hubbard_model type Model.
- Hubbard_model type Person.
- Hubbard_model type Chromodynamic.
- Hubbard_model type Mechanic.
- Hubbard_model type Model.
- Hubbard_model type Physic.
- Hubbard_model comment "The Hubbard model is an approximate model used, especially in solid state physics, to describe the transition between conducting and insulating systems. The Hubbard model, named after John Hubbard, is the simplest model of interacting particles in a lattice, with only two terms in the Hamiltonian (see example below): a kinetic term allowing for tunneling ('hopping') of particles between sites of the lattice and a potential term consisting of an on-site interaction.".