Choreographed entanglement dances: Topological states of quantum matter.
TL;DR: The progress of the field that took a sharp turn from Landau's broken symmetry paradigm to arrive at the modern notions of topological order and quantum entanglement in many-body systems is reviewed.
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Abstract: BACKGROUND Our world is very rich. One aspect of its richness is reflected in the existence of many different phases of matter. More than half a century ago, Landau developed a theory to describe phases of matter on the basis of symmetry breaking. He pointed out that the distinction between different phases stems from the way their constituent particles are organized (ordered); different phases correspond to different symmetries of the particles’ ordering. For many years, it was widely believed that the symmetry-breaking theory described all phases and all phase transitions. ADVANCES However, the study of chiral spin liquids and quantum Hall (QH) liquids eventually revealed phases of matter and organizations of particles not described by the symmetry-breaking theory. This new kind of order was referred to as topological order, because it is closely related to the topological quantum field theory introduced by Witten in 1989. It took researchers 20 years to realize that topological order is nothing but the patterns of quantum entanglement in many-body systems, which can be intuitively understood via two analogies to dancing: (i) Dance of particles (or step dance). Particles move in a spiral fashion and take a fixed number of steps to dance around each other. (ii) Dance of strings. The local degrees of freedom form strings that join in a particular way (see the figure). The strings can dance by moving around and reconnecting freely. The first type of dance, the step dance, describes topological order in chiral spin liquids and QH liquids, whereas the string dance describes topological order in other spin liquids. The QH liquids have been realized by electron systems at the interface of semiconductors and by graphene, under strong magnetic fields. The topological order categorized by the string dance may be realized by electron spins in certain materials, such as herbertsmithite and RuCl 3 . In the string-net liquids described by the string dance, the strings can be viewed as the “electric” flux of a gauge theory, and the string density wave give rise to an emergent (non-Abelian) gauge field. The ends of the strings are topological excitations that may carry fractional charges, fractional (non-Abelian) statistics in two-dimensional (2D) systems, and Fermi statistics in 3D systems. The QH liquids categorized by the step dance also have emergent gauge theory—the Chern-Simons gauge theory. This type of dance leads to indestructible perfect conducting boundaries, as well as indestructible qubits (units of quantum information). Topologically ordered states are materials with intriguing properties, which may be useful in electronic devices and topological quantum computation. OUTLOOK The emergence of topological phases of matter from the patterns of many-body quantum entanglement is a truly new phenomenon. New mathematics is needed to describe and classify topological orders. Recent studies have revealed that a unitary modular tensor category is required to classify 2D bosonic topological orders, and unitary braided fusion categories are necessary to classify 2D fermionic topological orders. To classify 2D topological orders with symmetry G , a G -cross unitary modular tensor category (for bosons) or a unitary braided fusion categories over Rep( G ) (for bosons and fermions) is needed. However, the mathematical theory, including higher-category theory, to classify topological orders in three dimensions and beyond is still evolving. Many-body entanglement is not only the origin of many new states of quantum matter (such as topological orders), it is also the origin of emergent gauge fields, as well as emergent Fermi or fractional statistics, from the simple bosonic qubits that form the system. Recent work has indicated that our empty space itself might be a system formed by many qubits—a qubit ocean. In other words, the space itself is formed by entangled qubits; if there is no qubit, there is no sense of space. The entanglement of the qubits provides a sense of neighborhood and dimension of the space. If the quantum entanglement of the qubits in the ocean is described by a particular string-net dance, then the string density waves in the string-net liquid generate electromagnetic waves that satisfy the Maxwell equation and gluon waves that satisfy the Yang-Mills equation. String ends produce electrons and quarks that carry Fermi statistics and satisfy the Dirac equation. Those emergent gauge fields and fermions are the elementary particles in the standard model. Such an emergence picture based on string-nets represents a unification of matter and information (see the figure).
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Citations
Experimental characterization of fragile topology in an acoustic metamaterial
Valerio Peri,Zhida Song,Marc Serra-Garcia,Pascal Engeler,Raquel Queiroz,Xueqin Huang,Weiyin Deng,Zhengyou Liu,B. Andrei Bernevig,B. Andrei Bernevig,B. Andrei Bernevig,Sebastian D. Huber +11 more
TL;DR: A combined theoretical and experimental approach is presented to identify, classify, and measure the properties of fragile topological phases by invoking twisted boundary conditions and verifying the expected experimental signature in an acoustic crystal.
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Continuous N\'{e}el-VBS quantum phase transition in non-local one-dimensional systems with SO(3) symmetry
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TL;DR: In this article, the edge states at the boundary of strongly interacting symmetry protected topological (SPT) states, when the bulk is driven to a disorder-order phase transition, were studied.
Spin liquids in geometrically perfect triangular antiferromagnets.
TL;DR: In this article, a brief review of recent theoretical developments that trace the parameter regime of the spin-liquid phase, with experimental results for Co-based and Yb-based triangular antiferromagnets is presented.
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