Jun Kondo applied third-order
perturbation theory to the Kondo model and showed that the
resistivity of the model diverges logarithmically as the temperature goes to zero. He explained why metal samples containing magnetic impurities have a resistance minimum (see
Kondo effect). The problem of finding a solution to the Kondo model which did not contain this unphysical divergence became known as the Kondo problem. A number of methods were used to attempt to solve the Kondo problem.
Phillip W. Anderson devised a perturbative
renormalization group method, known as poor man's scaling, which involves perturbatively eliminating excitations to the edges of the noninteracting band. This method indicated that, as temperature is decreased, the effective coupling between the spin and the band, J_{\mathrm{eff}}, increases without limit. As this method is perturbative in
J, it becomes invalid when
J becomes large, so this method did not truly solve the Kondo problem, although it did hint at the way forward. The Kondo problem was finally solved when
Kenneth G. Wilson applied the
numerical renormalization group to the Kondo model and showed that the resistivity goes to a constant as temperature goes to zero. The Kondo model is intimately related to the
Anderson impurity model, as can be shown by
Schrieffer–Wolff transformation. == Variants ==