Roundtable: What can we learn about confinement and anomalous effects in QCD using analog systems?
M. Cristina Diamantini, Dmitri E. Kharzeev, Alexander Molochkov,, Thomas Schaefer, Tin Sulejmanpasic

TL;DR
This paper explores how analog systems in atomic and condensed matter physics can provide insights into confinement and anomalous effects in quantum chromodynamics, highlighting recent interdisciplinary connections.
Contribution
It presents new examples of how emergent phenomena in many-body systems relate to non-perturbative QCD effects, bridging different areas of physics.
Findings
Emergent phenomena in atomic systems can model QCD confinement.
Analog systems reveal insights into non-perturbative effects.
Interdisciplinary approaches enhance understanding of QCD.
Abstract
We discuss a number of examples for recent connections between emergent phenomena in many-body systems in atomic and condensed matter physics, and confinement and other non-perturbative effects in quantum chromodynamics.
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Taxonomy
TopicsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Quantum many-body systems · High-Energy Particle Collisions Research
