236 research outputs found
Fractional quantization of the topological charge pumping in a one-dimensional superlattice
A one-dimensional quantum charge pump transfers a quantized charge in each
pumping cycle. This quantization is topologically robust being analogous to the
quantum Hall effect. The charge transferred in a fraction of the pumping period
is instead generally unquantized. We show, however, that with specific
symmetries in parameter space the charge transferred at well-defined fractions
of the pumping period is quantized as integer fractions of the Chern number. We
illustrate this in a one-dimensional Harper-Hofstadter model and show that the
fractional quantization of the topological charge pumping is independent of the
specific boundary conditions taken into account. We further discuss the
relevance of this phenomenon for cold atomic gases in optical superlattices.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, new material adde
Theoretical approach to Direct Resonant Inelastic X-Ray Scattering on Magnets and Superconductors
The capability to probe the dispersion of elementary spin, charge, orbital, and lattice excitations has positioned resonant inelastic x-ray scattering (RIXS) at the forefront of photon science. In this work, we will investigate how RIXS can contribute to a deeper understanding of the orbital properties and of the pairing mechanism in unconventional high-temperature superconductors.
In particular, we will show how direct RIXS spectra of magnetic excitations can reveal long-range orbital correlations in transition metal compounds, by discriminating different kind of orbital order in magnetic and antiferromagnetic systems.
Moreover, we will show how RIXS spectra of quasiparticle excitations in superconductors can measure the superconducting gap magnitude, and reveal the presence of nodal points and phase differences of the superconducting order parameter on the Fermi surface. This can reveal the properties of the underlying pairing mechanism in unconventional superconductors, in particular cuprates and iron pnictides, discriminating between different superconducting order parameter symmetries, such as s, d (singlet pairing) and p wave (triplet pairing)
Theoretical approach to direct resonant inelastic x-ray scattering on magnets and superconductors
The capability to probe the dispersion of elementary spin, charge, orbital,
and lattice excitations has positioned resonant inelastic x-ray scattering
(RIXS) at the forefront of photon science. In this work, we will investigate
how RIXS can contribute to a deeper understanding of the orbital properties and
of the pairing mechanism in unconventional high-temperature superconductors. In
particular, we will show how direct RIXS spectra of magnetic excitations can
reveal long-range orbital correlations in transition metal compounds, by
discriminating different kind of orbital order in magnetic and
antiferromagnetic systems. Moreover, we will show how RIXS spectra of
quasiparticle excitations in superconductors can measure the superconducting
gap magnitude, and reveal the presence of nodal points and phase differences of
the superconducting order parameter on the Fermi surface. This can reveal the
properties of the underlying pairing mechanism in unconventional
superconductors, in particular cuprates and iron pnictides, discriminating
between different superconducting order parameter symmetries, such as ,
(singlet pairing) and wave (triplet pairing).Comment: Ph. D. thesis, IFW-Dresden and Technische Universitaet Dresden.
Submitted in February 2015, defended in October 2015. Partially based on:
arXiv:1405.5556, arXiv:1302.5028, arXiv:1212.0112, and arXiv:1205.4940.
Revised version. 132 pages, 30 figure
Theoretical approach to resonant inelastic x-ray scattering in iron-based superconductors at the energy scale of the superconducting gap
We develop a phenomenological theory to predict the characteristic features
of the momentum-dependent scattering amplitude in resonant inelastic x-ray
scattering (RIXS) at the energy scale of the superconducting gap in iron-based
superconductors. Taking into account all relevant orbital states as well as
their specific content along the Fermi surface we evaluate the charge and spin
dynamical structure factors for the compounds LaOFeAs and LiFeAs, based on
tight-binding models which are fully consistent with recent angle-resolved
photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) data. We find a characteristic intensity
redistribution between charge and spin dynamical structure factors which
discriminates between sign-reversing and sign-preserving quasiparticle
excitations. Consequently, our results show that RIXS spectra can distinguish
between and wave gap functions in the singlet pairing case. In
addition, we find that an analogous intensity redistribution at small momenta
can reveal the presence of a chiral -wave triplet pairing.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
Topologically quantized current in quasiperiodic Thouless pumps
Thouless pumps are topologically nontrivial states of matter with quantized
charge transport, which can be realized in atomic gases loaded into an optical
lattice. This topological state is analogous to the quantum Hall state.
However, contrarily to the exact, extremely precise, and robust quantization of
the Hall conductance, the pumped charge is strictly quantized only when the
pumping time is a multiple of a characteristic timescale, i.e., the pumping
cycle duration. Here, we show instead that the pumped current becomes exactly
quantized, independently from the pumping time, if the system is led into a
quasiperiodic, incommensurate regime. In this quasiperiodic and topologically
nontrivial state, the Bloch bands and the Berry curvature become flat, the
pumped charge becomes linear in time, while the current becomes steady,
topologically quantized, and proportional to the Chern number. The quantization
of the current is exact up to exponentially small corrections. This has to be
contrasted with the case of the commensurate (nonquasiperiodic) regime, where
the current is not constant, and the pumped charge is quantized only at integer
multiples of the pumping cycle.Comment: Revised version, figure added, 5 pages, 3 figure
Degeneracy lifting of Majorana bound states due to electron-phonon interactions
We study theoretically how electron-phonon interaction affects the energies
and level broadening (inverse lifetime) of Majorana bound states (MBSs) in a
clean topological nanowire at low temperatures. At zero temperature, the energy
splitting between the right and left MBSs remains exponentially small with
increasing nanowire length . At finite temperatures, however, the absorption
of thermal phonons leads to the broadening of energy levels of the MBSs that
does not decay with system length, and the coherent absorption/emission of
phonons at opposite ends of the nanowire results in MBSs energy splitting that
decays only as an inverse power-law in . Both effects remain exponential in
temperature. In the case of quantized transverse motion of phonons, the
presence of Van Hove singularities in the phonon density of states causes
additional resonant enhancement of both the energy splitting and the level
broadening of the MBSs. This is the most favorable case to observe the
phonon-induced energy splitting of MBSs as it becomes much larger than the
broadening even if the topological nanowire is much longer than the coherence
length. We also calculate the charge and spin associated with the energy
splitting of the MBSs induced by phonons. We consider both a spinless
low-energy continuum model, which we evaluate analytically, as well as a
spinful lattice model for a Rashba nanowire, which we evaluate numerically
1D Majorana Goldstinos and extended supersymmetry in quantum wires
One-dimensional Majorana modes can be obtained as boundary excitations of
topologically nontrivial two-dimensional topological superconductors. Here, we
propose instead the bottom-up creation of one-dimensional, counterpropagating,
and dispersive Majorana modes as bulk excitations of a periodic chain of
partially-overlapping, zero-dimensional Majorana modes in proximitized quantum
nanowires via periodically-modulated magnetic fields. These dispersive
one-dimensional Majorana modes can be either massive or massless. Massless
Majorana modes are pseudohelical, having opposite Majorana pseudospin, and
realize emergent quantum mechanical supersymmetry. The system exhibits extended
supersymmetry with central extensions and with spontaneous partial breaking. We
identify the massless Majorana fermions as Goldstinos, i.e., the
Nambu-Goldstone fermions associated with the spontaneous breaking of
supersymmetry. The experimental fingerprint of massless Majorana modes and
supersymmetry is the presence of a finite zero-bias peak, which is generally
not expected for Majorana modes with a finite overlap and localized at a finite
distance. Moreover, slowly varying magnetic fields can realize an adiabatic
Majorana pump which can be used as a dynamically probe of topological
superconductivity.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, minor revision, references adde
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