Publication: Impurity Physics in Resonant X-Ray Scattering and Ultracold Atomic Gases
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This thesis presents work on theoretical tools used to study transient and quantum-fluctuating impurity potentials that arise in resonant x-ray scattering and ultracold atomic gases. These tools fall under two main classes, functional determinants for exact evaluation of many-fermion matrix elements, and the variational polaron transformation. The following work carefully introduces both approaches and compares theoretical predictions to known experimental and computational results. In several cases this thesis presents arguments that experiments on high-temperature superconducting cup rates must be reinterpreted in terms of a quasiparticle picture. Where no experimental data exist, predictions are made and suggestions given for new uses for simple experimental techniques. For example, indirect resonant inelastic x-ray scattering turns out to be a versatile pseudo gap probe, and radio frequency absorption of a fermi gas with an impurity can detect a repulsively-bound state.