Call for Abstracts
Contributions falling within the List of Topics below are welcome.
Abstracts should be submitted through the On-Line Registration Portal.
At least one author of each presented contribution must be registered at the conference. Each registered participant can submit only one abstract.
The deadline for abstract submission is January 15th, 2007. The notification of abstract acceptance, in the default form of poster presentations, is scheduled for February 15th. Some of the accepted abstracts will subsequently be selected for contributed oral presentations; the respective authors will be notified no later than April 15th.
List of Topics
- Quantum phase transitions
- Heavy fermion systems
- Quantum magnetism and frustrated magnets
- High temperature superconductivity
- Organic conductors and magnets
- Low dimensional systems
- Non-Fermi liquids and exotic quantum phases
- Unconventional and novel superconductors
- Kondo impurity and Kondo lattice systems
- Mott-Hubbard systems
- Interplay between spin-, charge- and orbital degrees of freedom
- Correlated electrons in nanostructures
- Quantum Hall liquids
- Mathematical models and computational studies
- Correlated atoms in optical lattices
- New developments
Related Outreach Efforts
As part of our outreach efforts to make the work on the field of Strongly Correlated Electron Systems visible to a wider audience, we request from participants to kindly provide a popular version of their submitted Abstracts. The Popular Abstracts are short abstracts in the style of the Physical Review Focus that will be selected for display on the conference website and will be shared with the local newspapers and with groups related to physics education. They should be short and avoid technical jargon and complicated formulas. If the contributors have nice striking figures related to their work available, and if they are willing to share them, please indicate <figures available> and you might be contacted by the conference organizers to ask you about them (you can also describe your figures in the space reserved for comments, that way the description does not count against the number-of-words limit on the size of the abstracts).
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