Ultrafast optical spectroscopy of strongly correlated materials and high-temperature superconductors: a non-equilibrium approach
Claudio Giannetti, Massimo Capone, Daniele Fausti, Michele Fabrizio,, Fulvio Parmigiani, Dragan Mihailovic

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent advances in ultrafast optical spectroscopy techniques that probe the non-equilibrium dynamics of strongly correlated materials, revealing insights into phase transitions, exotic states, and superconductivity beyond equilibrium studies.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of experimental and theoretical progress in non-equilibrium studies of correlated oxides and other materials, highlighting new frontiers and challenges.
Findings
Monitoring sub-picosecond dynamics reveals details of phase transitions.
Non-equilibrium techniques uncover bosonic excitations mediating interactions.
Advances enable studying materials under extreme photo-stimulation conditions.
Abstract
In the last two decades, non-equilibrium spectroscopies have evolved from avant-garde studies to crucial tools for expanding our understanding of the physics of strongly correlated materials. The possibility of obtaining simultaneously spectroscopic and temporal information has led to insights that are complementary to (and in several cases beyond) those attainable by studying the matter at equilibrium. Multiple phase transitions and new orders arising from competing interactions are benchmark examples where the interplay among electrons, lattice, and spin dynamics can be disentangled because of the different timescales that characterize the recovery of the initial ground state. The nature of the broken-symmetry phases and of the bosonic excitations that mediate the electronic interactions, eventually leading to superconductivity or other exotic states, can be revealed by observing the…
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