I am an Associate Professor at University of Florida working on theoretical condensed matter physics.
I obtained my PhD in August 2015 from University of Wisconsin-Madison. The focus of my graduate research was the physics of quantum criticality and high-Tc superconductivity. From 2015 to 2018 I did my postdoc as a Moore foundation scholar at the Institute for Condensed Matter Theory of University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. During my postdoc I have also been working on the topological phases of matter, focusing on novel topological superconducting phases and semimetal phases. I am interested in general aspects of quantum field theory and its applications to condensed matter systems.
Here are all my papers on arXiv.org.
I was named a Colonel Allan R. and Margaret G. Crow Term Professor from 2024-2027.
I gave an invited talk at the KITP conference on “Electron Correlations beyond the Quasiparticle Paradigm: Theory and Experiment” on Sep 20, 2023.
I was awarded the Nevill F. Mott Prize by SCES 2020/21, and gave an invited talk online. The citation for the prize is "for his outstanding contributions to the theory of strongly correlated electron systems, particularly superconductivity and non-Fermi liquid behavior."