Research Seminars @ Illinois

Tailored for undergraduate researchers, this calendar is a curated list of research seminars at the University of Illinois. Explore the diverse world of research and expand your knowledge through engaging sessions designed to inspire and enlighten.

To have your events added or removed from this calendar, please contact OUR at ugresearch@illinois.edu

The Physics Colloquium: Rafael Fernandes "Altermagnetism: an unconventional quantum state of matter"

Mar 4, 2026   4:00 - 5:00 pm  
Loomis Lab 141
Sponsor
Department of Physics
Speaker
Rafael Fernandes (University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign)
Contact
Dani Swigart
E-Mail
dswigart@illinois.edu
Phone
217-244-8676
Views
23
Originating Calendar
Physics - Colloquium

Magnetism is the posterchild of how the interplay between electron-electron interactions and quantum physics promotes novel macroscopic phenomena. Historically, the evolution of our understanding of magnetism has been related to the discovery of new paradigms in condensed-matter physics, as exemplified by the connections between antiferromagnetism and Mott insulators, spin glasses and non-ergodic states, and spin liquids and fractionalized excitations. Recently, a new framework proposed to classify magnetic phases brought renewed interest in unconventional magnetic states, which are qualitatively distinct from ferromagnets and standard NĂ©el antiferromagnets. Among those, altermagnetic phases have been met with enthusiasm by the scientific community, as they display properties found in both ferromagnets (like the splitting of electronic bands with opposite spins) and conventional antiferromagnets (like the absence of a net magnetization). Formally, what distinguishes these three different magnetic states are the crystalline symmetries that, when combined with time reversal, leave the system invariant. In the case of altermagnets, because these symmetries involve rotations, the system is endowed with unique properties such as nodal spin-splitting and piezomagnetism. In this talk, I will introduce the concept of altermagnetism and discuss its connection to long-standing problems in the field of quantum materials, such as multipolar magnetism and electronic liquid-crystalline phases. I will also present the predicted experimental signatures of altermagnetic order in thermodynamic and transport properties, and show that altermagnets provide a fertile ground to realize non-trivial topological and superconducting phenomena in quantum materials. 

 

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