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Kondo effect

The Kondo effect refers to the non-trivial physics associated with the presence of a magnetic impurity in a solid (generally, a metal). It was found that the resistance of a metal with these impurities does not decrease to a constant at low temperatures (as for a metal with non-magnetic impurities), but actually hits a shallow minimum at a temperature of order 10 K, then increases at lower temperatures.

Jun Kondo (近藤 淳) did the first proper calculation regarding this effect, which showed that in higher orders of perturbation theory, the resistance will diverge as the temperature approaches 0 K. The temperature dependence of the electronic resistance including the Kondo effect is written as:

\rho(T) = \rho_0 + aT^2 + c_m \ln\frac{\mu}{T} + bT^5,

where ρ0 is the residual resistance, aT2 shows the contribution from the Fermi liquid properties, and the term bT5 is from the lattice vibrations. Jun Kondo has derived the third term of the logarithmic dependence. Later calculations refined this result to produce a finite resistivity but retained the feature of a resistance minimum at a non-zero temperature. One defines the Kondo temperature as the energy scale, limiting the validity of the Kondo results. The Anderson model and accompanying renormalization theory was an important contribution to understanding the underlying physics of the problem.

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