148 research outputs found

    Unconventional Fusion and Braiding of Topological Defects in a Lattice Model

    Full text link
    We demonstrate the semiclassical nature of symmetry twist defects that differ from quantum deconfined anyons in a true topological phase by examining non-abelian crystalline defects in an abelian lattice model. An underlying non-dynamical ungauged S3-symmetry labels the quasi-extensive defects by group elements and gives rise to order dependent fusion. A central subgroup of local Wilson observables distinguishes defect-anyon composites by species, which can mutate through abelian anyon tunneling by tuning local defect phase parameters. We compute a complete consistent set of primitive basis transformations, or F-symbols, and study braiding and exchange between commuting defects. This suggests a modified spin-statistics theorem for defects and non-modular group structures unitarily represented by the braiding S and exchange T matrices. Non-abelian braiding operations in a closed system represent the sphere braid group projectively by a non-trivial central extension that relates the underlying symmetry.Comment: 44 pages, 43 figure

    Braiding Statistics and Congruent Invariance of Twist Defects in Bosonic Bilayer Fractional Quantum Hall States

    Full text link
    We describe the braiding statistics of topological twist defects in abelian bosonic bilayer (mmn) fractional quantum Hall (FQH) states, which reduce to the Z_n toric code when m=0. Twist defects carry non-abelian fractional Majorana-like characteristics. We propose local statistical measurements that distinguish the fractional charge, or species, of a defect-quasiparticle composite. Degenerate ground states and basis transformations of a multi-defect system are characterized by a consistent set of fusion properties. Non-abelian unitary exchange operations are determined using half braids between defects, and projectively represent the sphere braid group in a closed system. Defect spin statistics are modified by equating exchange with 4\pi rotation. The braiding S matrix is identified with a Dehn twist (instead of a \pi/2 rotation) on a torus decorated with a non-trivial twofold branch cut, and represents the congruent subgroup \Gamma_0(2) of modular transformations.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure

    From Dirac semimetals to topological phases in three dimensions: a coupled wire construction

    Full text link
    Weyl and Dirac (semi)metals in three dimensions have robust gapless electronic band structures. Their massless single-body energy spectra are protected by symmetries such as lattice translation, (screw) rotation and time reversal. In this manuscript, we discuss many-body interactions in these systems. We focus on strong interactions that preserve symmetries and are outside the single-body mean-field regime. By mapping a Dirac (semi)metal to a model based on a three dimensional array of coupled Dirac wires, we show (1) the Dirac (semi)metal can acquire a many-body excitation energy gap without breaking the relevant symmetries, and (2) interaction can enable an anomalous Weyl (semi)metallic phase that is otherwise forbidden by symmetries in the single-body setting and can only be present holographically on the boundary of a four dimensional weak topological insulator. Both of these topological states support fractional gapped (gapless) bulk (resp. boundary) quasiparticle excitations.Comment: 29 pages, 19 figures. This version has an expanded 'Summary of Results' and 'Conclusion and Discussion' section to make it more accessible to a broader audienc

    Symmetric-Gapped Surface States of Fractional Topological Insulators

    Full text link
    We construct the symmetric-gapped surface states of a fractional topological insulator with electromagnetic θ\theta-angle θem=π3\theta_{em} = \frac{\pi}{3} and a discrete Z3\mathbb{Z}_3 gauge field. They are the proper generalizations of the T-pfaffian state and pfaffian/anti-semion state and feature an extended periodicity compared with their of "integer" topological band insulators counterparts. We demonstrate that the surface states have the correct anomalies associated with time-reversal symmetry and charge conservation.Comment: 5 pages, 33 references and 2 pages of supplemental materia

    From orbifolding conformal field theories to gauging topological phases

    Full text link
    Topological phases of matter in (2+1) dimensions are commonly equipped with global symmetries, such as electric-magnetic duality in gauge theories and bilayer symmetry in fractional quantum Hall states. Gauging these symmetries into local dynamical ones is one way of obtaining exotic phases from conventional systems. We study this using the bulk-boundary correspondence and applying the orbifold construction to the (1+1) dimensional edge described by a conformal field theory (CFT). Our procedure puts twisted boundary conditions into the partition function, and predicts the fusion, spin and braiding behavior of anyonic excitations after gauging. We demonstrate this for the electric-magnetic self-dual ZN\mathbb{Z}_N gauge theory, the twofold symmetric SU(3)1SU(3)_1, and the S3S_3-symmetric SO(8)1SO(8)_1 Wess-Zumino-Witten theories.Comment: 23 pages, 1 figur
    corecore