Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
128 lines (101 loc) · 3.91 KB

File metadata and controls

128 lines (101 loc) · 3.91 KB
jupytext
text_representation
extension format_name format_version jupytext_version
.md
myst
0.13
1.18.1
kernelspec
display_name language name
Python 3
python
python3
authors
name affiliation email orcid
Anton Akhmerov
TU Delft
topocondmat@antonakhmerov.org
0000-0001-8031-1340
name affiliation
Jay Sau
University of Maryland
name affiliation
Bernard van Heck
Leiden University
name affiliation
Sebastian Rubbert
TU Delft
name affiliation
Rafał Skolasiński
TU Delft
name affiliation
Bas Nijholt
TU Delft
name affiliation
Irfan Muhammad
TU Delft
name affiliation
Tómas Örn Rosdahl
TU Delft
title Topology in Condensed Matter: Tying Quantum Knots
site
hide_toc hide_outline hide_title_block
true
true
true

+++ { "kind": "split-image" }

Topology in Condensed Matter: Tying Quantum Knots

Open-source graduate-level course
Built for curious students, educators, and researchers.

{button}Start learning <w0_background/intro>

Topology in Condensed Matter logo

+++

About the course

This is an open online course on topology in condensed matter. Initially developed for the edX platform in 2015, its development continues here.

:::{important} Learning goals

After following this course, you will:

  • Discover how topological concepts manifest in condensed matter systems
  • Get an overview of different research directions and important developments
  • Combine the relevant math with simulations and physical arguments to improve your understanding

:::

Authors

The course was initiated and written by

  • Anton Akhmerov (TU Delft)
  • Jay Sau (University of Maryland)
  • Bernard van Heck (Leiden University).

Most of the code was developed by TU Delft PhD students:

  • Sebastian Rubbert
  • Rafał Skolasiński
  • Bas Nijholt
  • Irfan Muhammad
  • Tómas Örn Rosdahl

The course videos were generously contributed by multiple experts in the field:

  • Yuval Oreg (Weizmann Institute of Science)
  • Carlo Beenakker (Leiden University)
  • Dganit Meidan (Ben Gurion University)
  • Ady Stern (Weizmann Institute of Science)
  • Bertrand Halperin (Harvard University)
  • Xiao-Liang Qi (Stanford University)
  • Duncan Haldane (Princeton University)
  • Charles Kane (University of Pennsylvania)
  • Michael Wimmer (TU Delft)
  • Joel Moore (Berkeley University)
  • David Vanderbilt (Rutgers University)
  • Taylor Hughes (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
  • Shinsei Ryu (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
  • Fabian Hassler (RWTH Aachen)
  • Piet Brouwer (Freie Universität Berlin)
  • Alexander Altland (University of Cologne)
  • Ashvin Vishwanath (University of California, Berkeley)
  • Vincenzo Vitelli (Leiden University)
  • Mark Rudner (Niels Bohr Institute)
  • Liang Fu (MIT)
  • Sankar Das Sarma (University of Maryland)
  • Barbara Terhal (RWTH Aachen)

+++ { "part": "acknowledgments" }

When working on the course, we greatly benefited from the support of:

We thank M. Wimmer and C. Groth for letting us use their code in some of the course materials.

For support with implementing the technical aspects of the course, we thank

Finally, we thank all the external speakers for contributing the course videos.

+++