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Georg Rohringer

Dr Georg Rohringer

Lecturer in Theoretical Physics

Research interests

  • Physics

Biography

Dr Georg Rohringer is a Lecturer in Theoretical Physics in the Department of Physics, King’s College London.

Dr Rohringer received his PhD from the TU Wien , Austria, in 2014 where he stayed for two more years as a Postdoctoral researcher. He then moved to Moscow (2016-2019) where he extended his research expertise in strongly correlated electron systems to topological states of matter and correlated systems out of equilibrium. In 2018 he received an Emmy Noether grant from the German Research Foundation which allowed him to build his own research group as a junior research group leader. The research group is hosted at the University of Hamburg where Dr Rohringer worked from 2019 until 2024 before he joined King’s College London.

Research

  • Strongly correlated electron systems
  • Correlation-driven metal-to-insulator-transitions
  • Magnetism & High-temperature superconductivity
  • Correlated electron systems out of equilibrium
  • Correlation effects in topological states of matter

Dr Rohringer’s research focus is on the theoretical understanding of strongly correlated electron system. This includes the development of new (quantum-field) theoretical methods and their numerical implementation as well as their application for investigation a variety of physical phenomena ranging from magnetism over high-temperature superconductivity to correlation effects in topological states of matter. 

Publications

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    Research

    Physics telescope
    Theoretical Particle Physics & Cosmology

    The research focus of the TPPC Group is on tests of new models of particle physics beyond the Standard Model, including supersymmetry, large extra dimensions and strings.

      Research

      Physics telescope
      Theoretical Particle Physics & Cosmology

      The research focus of the TPPC Group is on tests of new models of particle physics beyond the Standard Model, including supersymmetry, large extra dimensions and strings.