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# [SCI] Condensed Matter & Topological Physics ⏎ **Condensed Matter Physics** is the study of the collective behaviour of many-body quantum systems — metals, magnets, superfluids, liquid crystals, and topological phases — producing a rich variety of emergent phenomena. ⏎ ## Overview ⏎ The renormalisation group (Wilson, 1971–1974) provided a unified framework for understanding phase transitions and scale invariance — winning Wilson the **Nobel Prize 1982**. The fractional quantum Hall effect (Tsui, Störmer, Laughlin, 1982) revealed topologically ordered states. Thouless, Haldane, and Kosterlitz showed that topology classifies phases of matter beyond the Landau symmetry-breaking paradigm (**Nobel 2016**). Topological insulators and Weyl semimetals are now a research frontier. The same mathematical structures (Berry phase, Chern numbers, topological invariants) appear in quantum computing, photonics, and string theory. ⏎ ## Key Figures & Recognition ⏎ - **Kenneth Wilson** (1936–2013): Renormalisation group. **Nobel Prize 1982**. - **David Thouless**, **Duncan Haldane**, **Michael Kosterlitz**: Topological phases. **Nobel Prize 2016**. - **Horst Störmer**, **Daniel Tsui**, **Robert Laughlin**: FQHE. **Nobel Prize 1998**. ⏎ ## Seminal Papers ⏎ - [Wilson, K. "The Renormalization Group and Critical Phenomena." *Rev. Mod. Phys.* 55 (1983)](https://doi.org/10.1103/RevModPhys.55.583) - [Thouless et al. "Quantized Hall Conductance in a Two-Dimensional Periodic Potential." *PRL* 49 (1982)](https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.49.405) ⏎ # Parents ⏎ * [SCI] BCS Superconductivity⏎
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