58 research outputs found

    Fermion Condensation and Gapped Domain Walls in Topological Orders

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    We propose the concept of fermion condensation in bosonic topological orders in two spatial dimensions. Fermion condensation can be realized as gapped domain walls between bosonic and fermionic topological orders, which are thought of as a real-space phase transitions from bosonic to fermionic topological orders. This generalizes the previous idea of understanding boson condensation as gapped domain walls between bosonic topological orders. We show that generic fermion condensation obeys a Hierarchy Principle by which it can be decomposed into a boson condensation followed by a minimal fermion condensation, which involves a single self-fermion that is its own anti-particle and has unit quantum dimension. We then develop the rules of minimal fermion condensation, which together with the known rules of boson condensation, provides a full set of rules of fermion condensation. Our studies point to an exact mapping between the Hilbert spaces of a bosonic topological order and a fermionic topological order that share a gapped domain wall.Comment: 20 pages, 2-colum

    Revisiting Entanglement Entropy of Lattice Gauge Theories

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    Casini et al raise the issue that the entanglement entropy in gauge theories is ambiguous because its definition depends on the choice of the boundary between two regions.; even a small change in the boundary could annihilate the otherwise finite topological entanglement entropy between two regions. In this article, we first show that the topological entanglement entropy in the Kitaev model which is not a true gauge theory, is free of ambiguity. Then, we give a physical interpretation, from the perspectives of what can be measured in an experiement, to the purported ambiguity of true gauge theories, where the topological entanglement arises as redundancy in counting the degrees of freedom along the boundary separating two regions. We generalize these discussions to non-Abelian gauge theories.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figure

    Twisted Gauge Theory Model of Topological Phases in Three Dimensions

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    We propose an exactly solvable lattice Hamiltonian model of topological phases in 3+13+1 dimensions, based on a generic finite group GG and a 44-cocycle ω\omega over GG. We show that our model has topologically protected degenerate ground states and obtain the formula of its ground state degeneracy on the 33-torus. In particular, the ground state spectrum implies the existence of purely three-dimensional looplike quasi-excitations specified by two nontrivial flux indices and one charge index. We also construct other nontrivial topological observables of the model, namely the SL(3,Z)SL(3,\mathbb{Z}) generators as the modular SS and TT matrices of the ground states, which yield a set of topological quantum numbers classified by ω\omega and quantities derived from ω\omega. Our model fulfills a Hamiltonian extension of the 3+13+1-dimensional Dijkgraaf-Witten topological gauge theory with a gauge group GG. This work is presented to be accessible for a wide range of physicists and mathematicians.Comment: 37 pages, 9 figures, 4 tables; revised to improve the clarity; references adde
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