38 research outputs found
Chiral Anomaly, Topological Field Theory, and Novel States of Matter
Starting with a description of the motivation underlying the analysis
presented in this paper and a brief survey of the chiral anomaly, I proceed to
review some basic elements of the theory of the quantum Hall effect in 2D
incompressible electron gases in an external magnetic field, ("Hall
insulators"). I discuss the origin and role of anomalous chiral edge currents
and of anomaly inflow in 2D insulators with explicitly or spontaneously broken
time reversal, i.e., in Hall insulators and "Chern insulators". The topological
Chern-Simons action yielding the large-scale response equations for the 2D bulk
of such states of matter is displayed. A classification of Hall insulators
featuring quasi-particles with abelian braid statistics is sketched.
Subsequently, the chiral edge spin currents encountered in some time-reversal
invariant 2D topological insulators with spin-orbit interactions and the bulk
response equations of such materials are described. A short digression into the
theory of 3D topological insulators, including "axionic insulators", follows
next. To conclude, some open problems are described and a problem in cosmology
related to axionic insulators is mentioned. As far as the quantum Hall effect
and the spin currents in time-reversal invariant 2D topological insulators are
concerned this review is based on extensive work my collaborators and I carried
out in the early 1990's.Comment: 30 pages, 3 figures, to appear in: "Ludwig Faddeev Memorial Volume: A
Life in Mathematical Physics", edited by Molin Ge, Antti Niemi, Kok Khoo
Phua, and Leon A Takhtajan (World Scientific, 2018);
http://www.worldscientific.com/worldscibooks/10.1142/1081
Lie-Schwinger block-diagonalization and gapped quantum chains
We study quantum chains whose Hamiltonians are perturbations by bounded
interactions of short range of a Hamiltonian that does not couple the degrees
of freedom located at different sites of the chain and has a strictly positive
energy gap above its ground-state energy. We prove that, for small values of a
coupling constant, the spectral gap of the perturbed Hamiltonian above its
ground-state energy is bounded from below by a positive constant uniformly in
the length of the chain. In our proof we use a novel method based on local
Lie-Schwinger conjugations of the Hamiltonians associated with connected
subsets of the chain
Do We Understand Quantum Mechanics - Finally?
After some historical remarks concerning Schroedinger's discovery of wave
mechanics, we present a unified formalism for the mathematical description of
classical and quantum-mechanical systems, utilizing elements of the theory of
operator algebras. We then review some basic aspects of quantum mechanics and,
in particular, of its interpretation. We attempt to clarify what Quantum
Mechanics tells us about Nature when appropriate experiments are made. We
discuss the importance of the mechanisms of "dephasing" and "decoherence" in
associating "facts" with possible events and rendering complementary possible
events mutually exclusive.Comment: 42 pages, contribution to the Proceedings of a conference in memory
of Erwin Schroedinger, Vienna, January 201
Effective field theory and tunneling currents in the fractional quantum Hall effect
We review the construction of a low-energy effective field theory and its
state space for "abelian" quantum Hall fluids. The scaling limit of the
incompressible fluid is described by a Chern-Simons theory in 2+1 dimensions on
a manifold with boundary. In such a field theory, gauge invariance implies the
presence of anomalous chiral modes localized on the edge of the sample. We
assume a simple boundary structure, i.e., the absence of a reconstructed edge.
For the bulk, we consider a multiply connected planar geometry. We study
tunneling processes between two boundary components of the fluid and calculate
the tunneling current to lowest order in perturbation theory as a function of
dc bias voltage. Particular attention is paid to the special cases when the
edge modes propagate at the same speed, and when they exhibit two significantly
distinct propagation speeds. We distinguish between two "geometries" of
interference contours corresponding to the (electronic) Fabry-Perot and
Mach-Zehnder interferometers, respectively. We find that the interference term
in the current is absent when exactly one hole in the fluid corresponding to
one of the two edge components involved in the tunneling processes lies inside
the interference contour (i.e., in the case of a Mach-Zehnder interferometer).
We analyze the dependence of the tunneling current on the state of the quantum
Hall fluid and on the external magnetic flux through the sample.Comment: 49 pages, 7 figures; typos corrected - replaced with published
version; Annals of Physics (NY), (2011
A Microscopic Derivation of the Time-Dependent Hartree-Fock Equation with Coulomb Two-Body Interaction
We study the dynamics of a Fermi gas with a Coulomb interaction potential,
and show that, in a mean-field limiting regime, the dynamics is described by
the Hartree-Fock equation. This extends previous work of Bardos et al. to the
case of unbounded interaction potentials. We also express the mean-field limit
as a "superhamiltonian" system, and state our main result in terms of a
Heisenberg-picture dynamics of observables. This is a Egorov-type theorem