We review the construction of a low-energy effective field theory and its
state space for "abelian" quantum Hall fluids. The scaling limit of the
incompressible fluid is described by a Chern-Simons theory in 2+1 dimensions on
a manifold with boundary. In such a field theory, gauge invariance implies the
presence of anomalous chiral modes localized on the edge of the sample. We
assume a simple boundary structure, i.e., the absence of a reconstructed edge.
For the bulk, we consider a multiply connected planar geometry. We study
tunneling processes between two boundary components of the fluid and calculate
the tunneling current to lowest order in perturbation theory as a function of
dc bias voltage. Particular attention is paid to the special cases when the
edge modes propagate at the same speed, and when they exhibit two significantly
distinct propagation speeds. We distinguish between two "geometries" of
interference contours corresponding to the (electronic) Fabry-Perot and
Mach-Zehnder interferometers, respectively. We find that the interference term
in the current is absent when exactly one hole in the fluid corresponding to
one of the two edge components involved in the tunneling processes lies inside
the interference contour (i.e., in the case of a Mach-Zehnder interferometer).
We analyze the dependence of the tunneling current on the state of the quantum
Hall fluid and on the external magnetic flux through the sample.Comment: 49 pages, 7 figures; typos corrected - replaced with published
version; Annals of Physics (NY), (2011