Skip to main content
Home
Department Of Physics text logo
  • Research
    • Our research
    • Our research groups
    • Our research in action
    • Research funding support
    • Summer internships for undergraduates
  • Study
    • Undergraduates
    • Postgraduates
  • Engage
    • For alumni
    • For business
    • For schools
    • For the public
Menu
Theoretical physicists working at a blackboard collaboration pod in the Beecroft building.
Credit: Jack Hobhouse

Shivaji Sondhi

Wykeham Professor of Physics

Sub department

  • Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics
shivaji.sondhi@physics.ox.ac.uk
Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics, room 60.04
  • About
  • Publications

Rare region effects dominate weakly disordered three-dimensional Dirac points

Physical Review B American Physical Society (APS) 89:24 (2014) 245110

Authors:

Rahul Nandkishore, David A Huse, SL Sondhi
More details from the publisher

Rare region effects dominate weakly disordered 3D Dirac points

(2014)

Authors:

Rahul Nandkishore, David A Huse, SL Sondhi
More details from the publisher

Many-body localization and symmetry-protected topological order

Physical Review B American Physical Society (APS) 89:14 (2014) 144201

Authors:

Anushya Chandran, Vedika Khemani, CR Laumann, SL Sondhi
More details from the publisher

Tunable nonequilibrium dynamics of field quenches in spin ice.

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 111:2 (2014) 640-645

Authors:

Sarah Mostame, Claudio Castelnovo, Roderich Moessner, Shivaji L Sondhi

Abstract:

We present nonequilibrium physics in spin ice as a unique setting that combines kinematic constraints, emergent topological defects, and magnetic long-range Coulomb interactions. In spin ice, magnetic frustration leads to highly degenerate yet locally constrained ground states. Together, they form a highly unusual magnetic state--a "Coulomb phase"--whose excitations are point-like defects--magnetic monopoles--in the absence of which effectively no dynamics is possible. Hence, when they are sparse at low temperature, dynamics becomes very sluggish. When quenching the system from a monopole-rich to a monopole-poor state, a wealth of dynamical phenomena occur, the exposition of which is the subject of this article. Most notably, we find reaction diffusion behavior, slow dynamics owing to kinematic constraints, as well as a regime corresponding to the deposition of interacting dimers on a honeycomb lattice. We also identify potential avenues for detecting the magnetic monopoles in a regime of slow-moving monopoles. The interest in this model system is further enhanced by its large degree of tunability and the ease of probing it in experiment: With varying magnetic fields at different temperatures, geometric properties--including even the effective dimensionality of the system--can be varied. By monitoring magnetization, spin correlations or zero-field NMR, the dynamical properties of the system can be extracted in considerable detail. This establishes spin ice as a laboratory of choice for the study of tunable, slow dynamics.
More details from the publisher
More details

How universal is the entanglement spectrum?

(2013)

Authors:

Anushya Chandran, Vedika Khemani, SL Sondhi
More details from the publisher

Pagination

  • First page First
  • Previous page Prev
  • …
  • Page 27
  • Page 28
  • Page 29
  • Page 30
  • Current page 31
  • Page 32
  • Page 33
  • Page 34
  • Page 35
  • …
  • Next page Next
  • Last page Last

Footer Menu

  • Contact us
  • Giving to the Dept of Physics
  • Work with us
  • Media

User account menu

  • Log in

Follow us

FIND US

Clarendon Laboratory,

Parks Road,

Oxford,

OX1 3PU

CONTACT US

Tel: +44(0)1865272200

University of Oxfrod logo Department Of Physics text logo
IOP Juno Champion logo Athena Swan Silver Award logo

© University of Oxford - Department of Physics

Cookies | Privacy policy | Accessibility statement

Built by: Versantus

  • Home
  • Research
  • Study
  • Engage
  • Our people
  • News & Comment
  • Events
  • Our facilities & services
  • About us
  • Current students
  • Staff intranet