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Satellites in electronic spectra are pure many-body effects, and their study has been of increasing interest in both experiment and theory. The presence of satellites due to plasmon excitations can be understood with simple models of electron-boson coupling. It is far from obvious how to match such a model to real spectra, where more than one kind of quasi-particle and of satellite excitation coexist. Our joint experimental and theoretical study shows that satellites in the angle-resolved photoemission spectra of the prototype simple metal aluminum consist of a superposition of dispersing and non-dispersing features. Both are due to electron-electron interaction, but the non-dispersing satellites also reflect the thermal motion of the atoms. Moreover, besides their energy dispersion, we also show and explain a strong shape dispersion of the satellites. By taking into account these effects, our first principles calculations using the GW+C approach of many-body perturbation theory reproduce and explain the experimental spectra to an unprecedented extent.
We show that in a one-dimensional translationally invariant tight binding chain, non-dispersing wave packets can in general be realized as Floquet eigenstates -- or linear combinations thereof -- using a spatially inhomogeneous drive, which can be as
The spectrum of the strongly correlated systems usually shows resonant peaks at finite energy, with examples in the 115 Ce family which are reproduced by the dynamical mean-field theory. A similar structure has been seen recently in the orbitally sel
In the early days of high temperature superconductivity it was already recognized that magnetic properties of these materials are intimately related to the superconducting ones . When doped, the long-range ordered antiferromagnetic background of pris
Electronic topology in metallic kagome compounds is under intense scrutiny. We present transport experiments in Na2/3CoO2 in which the Na order differentiates a Co kagome sub-lattice in the triangular CoO2 layers. Hall and magnetoresistance (MR) data
X-ray photoemission spectra generally exhibit satellite features in addition to the quasi-particle peaks due to many-body excitations, which have been of considerable theoretical and experimental interest. However, the satellites attributed to charge