Open this publication in new window or tab >>2023 (English)Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summary (Other academic)
Abstract [en]
A central topic in condensed matter research during the last decades has been the study and classification of topological phases of matter. Topological insulators in particular, a subset of symmetry protected topological phases, have been investigated for over a decade. In recent years, several extensions to this formalism have been proposed to study more unconventional systems.In this thesis we explore two of these extensions, where key assumptions in the original formalism are removed. The first case is critical systems, which have no energy gap. Conventional topological invariants are discontinuous at topological transitions, and therefore not well-defined for critical systems. We propose a method for generalizing conventional topological invariants to critical systems and show robustness to disorder that preserves criticality. The second case involves non-Hermitian systems, which appear in effective descriptions of dissipation, where we study the entanglement spectrum and its connection to topological invariants. Furthermore, by introducing non-Hermiticity to critical systems we show how the winding numbers that characterize some topological phases of the non-Hermitian system, as well as topological signatures in the entanglement spectrum, can be obtained from the related critical model.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Stockholm: Department of Physics, Stockholm University, 2023. p. 87
Keywords
Topological phases, Critical systems, Non-Hermitian systems
National Category
Condensed Matter Physics
Research subject
Theoretical Physics
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-212557 (URN)978-91-8014-128-4 (ISBN)978-91-8014-129-1 (ISBN)
Public defence
2023-01-25, sal FB53, AlbaNova universitetscentrum, Roslagstullsbacken 21, Stockholm, 13:00 (English)
Opponent
Supervisors
2023-01-022022-12-082022-12-22Bibliographically approved