54 research outputs found
A Block Slipping on a Sphere with Friction: Exact and Perturbative Solutions
A well studied problem in elementary mechanics is the location of the release point of a particle that slides on the surface of a frictionless sphere when it is released from rest at the top. We generalize this problem to include the effects of sliding friction and solve it by a perturbation expansion in the coefficient of sliding friction and by an exact integration of the equation of motion. A comparison of the two solutions identifies a parameter range where the perturbation series accurately represents the motion of the particle and another range where the perturbative solution fails qualitatively to describe the motion of the particle
Casimir Interactions Between Scatterers in Metallic Carbon Nanotubes
We study interactions between localized scatterers on metallic carbon nanotubes by a mapping onto a one-dimensional Casimir problem. Backscattering of electrons between localized scattering potentials mediates long-range forces between them. We model spatially localized scatterers by local and nonlocal potentials and treat simultaneously the effects of intravalley and intervalley backscattering. We find that the long-range forces between scatterers exhibit the universal power-law decay of the Casimir force in one dimension, with prefactors that control the sign and strength of the interaction. These prefactors are nonuniversal and depend on the symmetry and degree of localization of the scattering potentials. We find that local potentials inevitably lead to a coupled valley scattering problem, though by contrast nonlocal potentials lead to two decoupled single-valley problems in a physically realized regime. The Casimir effect due to two-valley scattering potentials is characterized by the appearance of spatially periodic modulations of the force
Regularized lattice theory for spatially dispersive nonlinear optical conductivities
Nonlinear optical responses are becoming increasingly relevant for
characterizing the symmetries and quantum geometry of electronic phases in
materials. Here, we develop an expanded diagrammatic scheme for calculating
spatially dispersive corrections to nonlinear optical conductivities, which we
expect to enhance or even dominate even-order responses in materials of recent
interest. Building upon previous work that enforces gauge invariance of
spatially uniform nonlinear optical responses, we review the cancellation of
diagrams required to ensure the equivalence between velocity gauge and length
gauge formulations, and provide a simple vertex rule for extending optical
responses to first order in the light wave vector q. We then demonstrate the
method with calculations on a prototypical centrosymmetric model where spatial
dispersion admits anomalous secondharmonic generation, a response that is
symmetry-forbidden under the dipole approximation.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figure
Terahertz Circular Dichroism in Commensurate Twisted Bilayer Graphene
We report calculations of terahertz ellipticities in large-angle,
21.79 and 38.21, commensurate twisted bilayer graphene, and
predict values as high as 1.5 millidegrees in the terahertz region for this
non-magnetic material. This terahertz circular dichroism exhibits a magnitude
comparable to that of chiral materials in the visible region. At low
frequencies, the dichroic response is mediated by strong interlayer
hybridization, which allows us to probe the symmetry and strength of these
couplings. Crucially, lateral interlayer translation tunes this response, in
contrast to small twist angle bilayer graphene's near invariance under under
interlayer translation. We examine the magnitude and phase of the interlayer
coupling for all structures containing fewer than 400 atoms per unit cell.
Finally, we find that the dichroism can be manipulated by applying an electric
field or with doping.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
Protected Fermionic Zero Modes in Periodic Gauge Fields
It is well-known that macroscopically-normalizable zero-energy wavefunctions
of spin- particles in a two-dimensional inhomogeneous magnetic
field are spin-polarized and exactly calculable with degeneracy equaling the
number of flux quanta linking the whole system. Extending this argument to
massless Dirac fermions subjected to magnetic fields that have \textit{zero}
net flux but are doubly periodic in real space, we show that there exist
\textit{only two} Bloch-normalizable zero-energy eigenstates, one for each spin
flavor. This result is immediately relevant to graphene multilayer systems
subjected to doubly-periodic strain fields, which at low energies, enter the
Hamiltonian as periodic pseudo-gauge vector potentials. Furthermore, we explore
various related settings including nonlinearly-dispersing band structure models
and systems with singly-periodic magnetic fields.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure. Comments are very appreciate
Floquet Chern Insulators of Light
Achieving topologically-protected robust transport in optical systems has
recently been of great interest. Most topological photonic structures can be
understood by solving the eigenvalue problem of Maxwell's equations for a
static linear system. Here, we extend topological phases into dynamically
driven nonlinear systems and achieve a Floquet Chern insulator of light in
nonlinear photonic crystals (PhCs). Specifically, we start by presenting the
Floquet eigenvalue problem in driven two-dimensional PhCs and show it is
necessarily non-Hermitian. We then define topological invariants associated
with Floquet bands using non-Hermitian topological band theory, and show that
topological band gaps with non-zero Chern number can be opened by breaking
time-reversal symmetry through the driving field. Furthermore, we show that
topological phase transitions between Floquet Chern insulators and normal
insulators occur at synthetic Weyl points in a three-dimensional parameter
space consisting of two momenta and the driving frequency. Finally, we
numerically demonstrate the existence of chiral edge states at the interfaces
between a Floquet Chern insulator and normal insulators, where the transport is
non-reciprocal and uni-directional. Our work paves the way to further exploring
topological phases in driven nonlinear optical systems and their optoelectronic
applications, and our method of inducing Floquet topological phases is also
applicable to other wave systems, such as phonons, excitons, and polaritons
Surface State Magnetization and Chiral Edge States on Topological Insulators
We study the interaction between a ferromagnetically ordered medium and the surface states of a topological insulator with a general surface termination that were identified recently [F. Zhang et al.Phys. Rev. B 86 081303(R) (2012)]. This interaction is strongly crystal face dependent and can generate chiral states along edges between crystal facets even for a uniform magnetization. While magnetization parallel to quintuple layers shifts the momentum of the Dirac point, perpendicular magnetization lifts the Kramers degeneracy at any Dirac points except on the side face, where the spectrum remains gapless and the Hall conductivity switches sign. Chiral states can be found at any edge that reverses the projection of the surface normal to the stacking direction of quintuple layers. Magnetization also weakly hybridizes noncleavage surfaces
Topological Insulators in Three Dimensions
We study three-dimensional generalizations of the quantum spin Hall (QSH) effect. Unlike two dimensions, where a single Z2 topological invariant governs the effect, in three dimensions there are 4 invariants distinguishing 16 phases with two general classes: weak (WTI) and strong (STI) topological insulators. The WTI are like layered 2D QSH states, but are destroyed by disorder. The STI are robust and lead to novel ‘‘topological metal’’ surface states. We introduce a tight binding model which realizes the WTI and STI phases, and we discuss its relevance to real materials, including bismuth
Theoretical investigation of the evolution of the topological phase of BiSe under mechanical strain
The topological insulating phase results from inversion of the band gap due
to spin-orbit coupling at an odd number of time-reversal symmetric points. In
BiSe, this inversion occurs at the point. For bulk
BiSe, we have analyzed the effect of arbitrary strain on the
point band gap using Density Functional Theory. By computing the band structure
both with and without spin-orbit interactions, we consider the effects of
strain on the gap via Coulombic interaction and spin-orbit interaction
separately. While compressive strain acts to decrease the Coulombic gap, it
also increases the strength of the spin-orbit interaction, increasing the
inverted gap. Comparison with BiTe supports the conclusion that effects
on both Coulombic and spin-orbit interactions are critical to understanding the
behavior of topological insulators under strain, and we propose that the
topological insulating phase can be effectively manipulated by inducing strain
through chemical substitution
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