Supplements
Exotic matter
Vol. 464, No. 7286 pp 175–216
In this supplement
Bring together a large number of particles and they can order themselves in unusual ways. This can give rise to emergent phenomena that cannot be understood solely in terms of the interactions that rule at the microscopic level — a theoretical and experimental playground for physicists in which the maxim 'more is different' holds true in particularly striking ways.
Editorial
Exotic matter free access
Dan Csontos
doi:10.1038/464175a
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Articles
REVIEW
The enigma of supersolidity
Sebastien Balibar
doi:10.1038/nature08913
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (1,493KB)
PERSPECTIVE
Superconductivity gets an iron boost
Igor I. Mazin
doi:10.1038/nature08914
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (1,092KB)
REVIEW
Non-Abelian states of matter
Ady Stern
doi:10.1038/nature08915
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (1,364KB)
PERSPECTIVE
The birth of topological insulators
Joel E. Moore
doi:10.1038/nature08916
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (1,327KB)
REVIEW
Spin liquids in frustrated magnets
Leon Balents
doi:10.1038/nature08917
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (1,781KB)
REVIEW
Electron liquids and solids in one dimension
Vikram V. Deshpande, Marc Bockrath, Leonid I. Glazman & Amir Yacoby
doi:10.1038/nature08918
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (1,316KB)
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