147 research outputs found
Supercurrent survival under Rosen-Zener quench of hard core bosons
We study the survival of super-currents in a system of impenetrable bosons
subject to a quantum quench from its critical superfluid phase to an insulating
phase. We show that the evolution of the current when the quench follows a
Rosen-Zener profile is exactly solvable. This allows us to analyze a quench of
arbitrary rate, from a sudden destruction of the superfluid to a slow opening
of a gap. The decay and oscillations of the current are analytically derived,
and studied numerically along with the momentum distribution after the quench.
In the case of small supercurrent boosts , we find that the current
surviving at long times is proportional to
Topological Anderson Insulator in Three Dimensions
Disorder, ubiquitously present in solids, is normally detrimental to the
stability of ordered states of matter. In this letter we demonstrate that not
only is the physics of a strong topological insulator robust to disorder but,
remarkably, under certain conditions disorder can become fundamentally
responsible for its existence. We show that disorder, when sufficiently strong,
can transform an ordinary metal with strong spin-orbit coupling into a strong
topological `Anderson' insulator, a new topological phase of quantum matter in
three dimensions.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. For related work and info visit
http://www.physics.ubc.ca/~franz
Bulk metals with helical surface states
In the flurry of experiments looking for topological insulator materials, it
has been recently discovered that some bulk metals very close to topological
insulator electronic states, support the same topological surface states that
are the defining characteristic of the topological insulator. First observed in
spin-polarized ARPES in Sb (D. Hsieh et al. Science 323, 919 (2009)), the
helical surface states in the metallic systems appear to be robust to at least
mild disorder. We present here a theoretical investigation of the nature of
these "helical metals" - bulk metals with helical surface states. We explore
how the surface and bulk states can mix, in both clean and disordered systems.
Using the Fano model, we discover that in a clean system, the helical surface
states are \emph{not} simply absorbed by hybridization with a non-topological
parasitic metallic band. Instead, they are pushed away from overlapping in
momentum and energy with the bulk states, leaving behind a finite-lifetime
surface resonance in the bulk energy band. Furthermore, the hybridization may
lead in some cases to multiplied surface state bands, in all cases retaining
the helical characteristic. Weak disorder leads to very similar effects -
surface states are pushed away from the energy bandwidth of the bulk, leaving
behind a finite-lifetime surface resonance in place of the original surface
states
Entanglement entropy of random quantum critical points in one dimension
For quantum critical spin chains without disorder, it is known that the
entanglement of a segment of N>>1 spins with the remainder is logarithmic in N
with a prefactor fixed by the central charge of the associated conformal field
theory. We show that for a class of strongly random quantum spin chains, the
same logarithmic scaling holds for mean entanglement at criticality and defines
a critical entropy equivalent to central charge in the pure case. This
effective central charge is obtained for Heisenberg, XX, and quantum Ising
chains using an analytic real-space renormalization group approach believed to
be asymptotically exact. For these random chains, the effective universal
central charge is characteristic of a universality class and is consistent with
a c-theorem.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Vortices and quasiparticles near the "superconductor-insulator" transition in thin films
We study the low temperature behavior of an amorphous superconducting film
driven normal by a perpendicular magnetic field (B). For this purpose we
introduce a new two-fluid formulation consisting of fermionized field induced
vortices and electrically neutralized Bogoliubov quasiparticles (spinons)
interacting via a long-ranged statistical interaction. This approach allows us
to access a novel non-Fermi liquid phase which naturally interpolates between
the low B superconductor and the high B normal metal. We discuss the transport,
thermodynamic, and tunneling properties of the resulting "vortex metal" phase.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, references adde
Majorana fermion chain at the Quantum Spin Hall edge
We study a realization of a 1d chain of Majorana bound states at the
interfaces between alternating ferromagnetic and superconducting regions at a
quantum spin Hall insulator edge. In the limit of well separated Majoranas, the
system can be mapped to the transverse field Ising model. The disordered
critical point can be reached by tuning the relative magnitude or phases of the
ferromagnetic and superconducting order parameters. We compute the voltage
dependence of the tunneling current from a metallic tip into the Majorana chain
as a direct probe of the random critical state.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Helical liquids and Majorana bound states in quantum wires
We show that the combination of spin-orbit coupling with a Zeeman field or
strong interactions may lead to the formation of a helical liquid in
single-channel quantum wires. In a helical liquid, electrons with opposite
velocities have opposite spin precession. We argue that zero-energy Majorana
bound states are formed in various situations when the wire is situated in
proximity to a conventional s-wave superconductor. This occurs when the
external magnetic field, the superconducting gap, or, in particular, the
chemical potential vary along the wire. We discuss experimental consequences of
the formation of the helical liquid and the Majorana bound states.Comment: 4+epsilon page
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