topological matter
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

74
(FIVE YEARS 30)

H-INDEX

14
(FIVE YEARS 4)

Author(s):  
Paul A. McClarty

At sufficiently low temperatures, magnetic materials often enter correlated phases hosting collective, coherent magnetic excitations such as magnons or triplons. Drawing on the enormous progress on topological materials of the past few years, recent research has led to new insights into the geometry and topology of these magnetic excitations. Berry phases associated with magnetic dynamics can lead to observable consequences in heat and spin transport, whereas analogs of topological insulators and semimetals can arise within magnon band structures from natural magnetic couplings. Magnetic excitations offer a platform to explore the interplay of magnetic symmetries and topology, to drive topological transitions using magnetic fields; examine the effects of interactions on topological bands; and generate topologically protected spin currents at interfaces. In this review, we survey progress on all these topics, highlighting aspects of topological matter that are unique to magnon systems and the avenues yet to be fully investigated. Expected final online publication date for the Annual Review of Condensed Matter Physics, Volume 13 is March 2022. Please see http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates for revised estimates.


2021 ◽  
Vol 104 (20) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mostafa Tanhayi Ahari ◽  
Shu Zhang ◽  
Ji Zou ◽  
Yaroslav Tserkovnyak

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lucas S. Palacios ◽  
Serguei Tchoumakov ◽  
Maria Guix ◽  
Ignacio Pagonabarraga ◽  
Samuel Sánchez ◽  
...  

AbstractCollective guidance of out-of-equilibrium systems without using external fields is a challenge of paramount importance in active matter, ranging from bacterial colonies to swarms of self-propelled particles. Designing strategies to guide active matter and exploiting enhanced diffusion associated to its motion will provide insights for application from sensing, drug delivery to water remediation. However, achieving directed motion without breaking detailed balance, for example by asymmetric topographical patterning, is challenging. Here we engineer a two-dimensional periodic topographical design with detailed balance in its unit cell where we observe spontaneous particle edge guidance and corner accumulation of self-propelled particles. This emergent behaviour is guaranteed by a second-order non-Hermitian skin effect, a topologically robust non-equilibrium phenomenon, that we use to dynamically break detailed balance. Our stochastic circuit model predicts, without fitting parameters, how guidance and accumulation can be controlled and enhanced by design: a device guides particles more efficiently if the topological invariant characterizing it is non-zero. Our work establishes a fruitful bridge between active and topological matter, and our design principles offer a blueprint to design devices that display spontaneous, robust and predictable guided motion and accumulation, guaranteed by out-of-equilibrium topology.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
T. J. Sturges ◽  
T. McDermott ◽  
A. Buraczewski ◽  
W. R. Clements ◽  
J. J. Renema ◽  
...  

AbstractQuantum simulations are becoming an essential tool for studying complex phenomena, e.g. quantum topology, quantum information transfer and relativistic wave equations, beyond the limitations of analytical computations and experimental observations. To date, the primary resources used in proof-of-principle experiments are collections of qubits, coherent states or multiple single-particle Fock states. Here we show a quantum simulation performed using genuine higher-order Fock states, with two or more indistinguishable particles occupying the same bosonic mode. This was implemented by interfering pairs of Fock states with up to five photons on an interferometer, and measuring the output states with photon-number-resolving detectors. Already this resource-efficient demonstration reveals topological matter, simulates non-linear systems and elucidates a perfect quantum transfer mechanism which can be used to transport Majorana fermions.


2020 ◽  
pp. 2000371
Author(s):  
Oliver Rader ◽  
Jaime Sánchez‐Barriga ◽  
Emile D. L. Rienks ◽  
Andrei Varykhalov ◽  
Gunther Springholz ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document