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Quantifying many-body effects by high-resolution Fourier transform scanning tunneling spectroscopy

Many-body phenomena are ubiquitous in solids, as electrons interact with one another and the many excitations arising from lattice, magnetic, and electronic degrees of freedom. These interactions can subtly influence the electronic properties of materials ranging from metals, exotic materials such as graphene, and topological insulators, or they can induce new phases of matter, as in conventional and unconventional superconductors, heavy fermion systems, and other systems of correlated electrons. As no single theoretical approach describes all such phenomena, the development of versatile methods for measuring many-body effects is key for understanding these systems. To date, angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) has been the method of choice for accessing this physics by directly imaging momentum resolved electronic structure. Scanning tunneling microscopy/spectroscopy (STM/S), renown for its real-space atomic resolution capability, can also access the electronic structure in momentum space using Fourier transform scanning tunneling spectroscopy (FT-STS). Here, we report a high-resolution FT-STS measurement of the Ag(111) surface state, revealing fine structure in the otherwise parabolic electronic dispersion. This deviation is induced by interactions with lattice vibrations and has not been previously resolved by any technique. This study advances STM/STS as a method for quantitatively probing many-body interactions. Combined with the spatial sensitivity of STM/STS, this technique opens a new avenue for studying such interactions at the nano-scale.

preprint2013arXivOpen access
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