34 research outputs found
Band twisting and resilience to disorder in long-range topological superconductors
Planar topological superconductors with power-law-decaying pairing display
different kinds of topological phase transitions where quasiparticles dubbed
nonlocal-massive Dirac fermions emerge. These exotic particles form through
long-range interactions between distant Majorana modes at the boundary of the
system. We show how these propagating-massive Dirac fermions neither mix with
bulk states nor Anderson-localize up to large amounts of static disorder
despite being finite energy. Analyzing the density of states (DOS) and the band
spectrum of the long-range topological superconductor, we identify the
formation of an edge gap and a surprising double peak structure in the DOS
which can be linked to a twisting of energy bands with nontrivial topology. Our
findings are amenable to experimental verification in the near future using
atom arrays on conventional superconductors, planar Josephson junctions on
two-dimensional electron gases, and Floquet driving of topological
superconductors.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
Symmetry-protected Topological Phases at Finite Temperature
We have applied the recently developed theory of topological Uhlmann numbers
to a representative model of a topological insulator in two dimensions, the
Qi-Wu-Zhang model. We have found a stable symmetry-protected topological (SPT)
phase under external thermal fluctuations in two-dimensions. A complete phase
diagram for this model is computed as a function of temperature and coupling
constants in the original Hamiltonian. It shows the appearance of large stable
phases of matter with topological properties compatible with thermal
fluctuations or external noise and the existence of critical lines separating
abruptly trivial phases from topological phases. These novel critical
temperatures represent thermal topological phase transitions. The initial part
of the paper comprises a self-contained explanation of the Uhlmann geometric
phase needed to understand the topological properties that it may acquire when
applied to topological insulators and superconductors.Comment: Contribution to the focus issue on "Artificial Graphene". Edited by
Maciej Lewenstein, Vittorio Pellegrini, Marco Polini and Mordechai (Moti)
Sege
Observation of topological Uhlmann phases with superconducting qubits
Topological insulators and superconductors at finite temperature can be
characterized by the topological Uhlmann phase. However, a direct experimental
measurement of this invariant has remained elusive in condensed matter systems.
Here, we report a measurement of the topological Uhlmann phase for a
topological insulator simulated by a system of entangled qubits in the IBM
Quantum Experience platform. By making use of ancilla states, otherwise
unobservable phases carrying topological information about the system become
accessible, enabling the experimental determination of a complete phase diagram
including environmental effects. We employ a state-independent measurement
protocol which does not involve prior knowledge of the system state. The
proposed measurement scheme is extensible to interacting particles and
topological models with a large number of bands.Comment: RevTex4 file, color figure
Staircase to Higher-Order Topological Phase Transitions
We find a series of topological phase transitions of increasing order, beyond
the more standard second-order phase transition in a one-dimensional
topological superconductor. The jumps in the order of the transitions depend on
the range of the pairing interaction, which is parametrized by an algebraic
decay with exponent . Remarkably, in the limit the order
of the topological transition becomes infinite. We compute the critical
exponents for the series of higher-order transitions in exact form and find
that they fulfill the hyperscaling relation. We also study the critical
behaviour at the boundary of the system and discuss potential experimental
platforms of magnetic atoms in superconductors.Comment: 5+5pages, 7 figures. Accepted as a Rapid Communicatio
Uhlmann phase as a topological measure for one-dimensional fermion systems
We introduce the Uhlmann geometric phase as a tool to characterize symmetry-protected topological phases in one-dimensional fermion systems, such as topological insulators and superconductors. Since this phase is formulated for general mixed quantum states, it provides a way to extend topological properties to finite temperature situations. We illustrate these ideas with some paradigmatic models and find that there exists a critical temperature Tc at which the Uhlmann phase goes discontinuously and abruptly to zero. This stands as a borderline between two different topological phases as a function of the temperature. Furthermore, at small temperatures we recover the usual notion of topological phase in fermion systems
Topological phases in nodeless tetragonal superconductors
We compute the topological phase diagram of 2D tetragonal superconductors for the only possible nodeless pairing channels compatible with that crystal symmetry. Subject to a Zeeman field and spin-orbit coupling, we demonstrate that these superconductors show surprising topological features: non-trivial high Chern numbers, massive edge states, and zero-energy modes out of high symmetry points, even though the edge states remain topologically protected. Interestingly, one of these pairing symmetries, d + id, has been proposed to describe materials such as water-intercalated sodium cobaltates, bilayer silicene or highly doped monolayer graphene