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      Chiral Majorana edge state in a quantum anomalous Hall insulator-superconductor structure

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          Abstract

          After the recognition of the possibility to implement Majorana fermions using the building blocks of solid-state matters, the detection of this peculiar particle has been an intense focus of research. Here we experimentally demonstrate a collection of Majorana fermions living in a one-dimensional transport channel at the boundary of a superconducting quantum anomalous Hall insulator thin film. A series of topological phase changes are controlled by the reversal of the magnetization, where a half-integer quantized conductance plateau (0.5e2/h) is observed as a clear signature of the Majorana phase. This transport signature can be well repeated during many magnetic reversal sweeps, and can be tracked at different temperatures, providing a promising evidence of the chiral Majorana edge modes in the system.

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          Classification of topological insulators and superconductors in three spatial dimensions

          We systematically study topological phases of insulators and superconductors (SCs) in 3D. We find that there exist 3D topologically non-trivial insulators or SCs in 5 out of 10 symmetry classes introduced by Altland and Zirnbauer within the context of random matrix theory. One of these is the recently introduced Z_2 topological insulator in the symplectic symmetry class. We show there exist precisely 4 more topological insulators. For these systems, all of which are time-reversal (TR) invariant in 3D, the space of insulating ground states satisfying certain discrete symmetry properties is partitioned into topological sectors that are separated by quantum phase transitions. 3 of the above 5 topologically non-trivial phases can be realized as TR invariant SCs, and in these the different topological sectors are characterized by an integer winding number defined in momentum space. When such 3D topological insulators are terminated by a 2D surface, they support a number (which may be an arbitrary non-vanishing even number for singlet pairing) of Dirac fermion (Majorana fermion when spin rotation symmetry is completely broken) surface modes which remain gapless under arbitrary perturbations that preserve the characteristic discrete symmetries. In particular, these surface modes completely evade Anderson localization. These topological phases can be thought of as 3D analogues of well known paired topological phases in 2D such as the chiral p-wave SC. In the corresponding topologically non-trivial and topologically trivial 3D phases, the wavefunctions exhibit markedly distinct behavior. When an electromagnetic U(1) gauge field and fluctuations of the gap functions are included in the dynamics, the SC phases with non-vanishing winding number possess non-trivial topological ground state degeneracies.
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            Paired states of fermions in two dimensions with breaking of parity and time-reversal symmetries, and the fractional quantum Hall effect

            We analyze pairing of fermions in two dimensions for fully-gapped cases with broken parity (P) and time-reversal (T), especially cases in which the gap function is an orbital angular momentum (\(l\)) eigenstate, in particular \(l=-1\) (p-wave, spinless or spin-triplet) and \(l=-2\) (d-wave, spin-singlet). For \(l\neq0\), these fall into two phases, weak and strong pairing, which may be distinguished topologically. In the cases with conserved spin, we derive explicitly the Hall conductivity for spin as the corresponding topological invariant. For the spinless p-wave case, the weak-pairing phase has a pair wavefunction that is asympototically the same as that in the Moore-Read (Pfaffian) quantum Hall state, and we argue that its other properties (edge states, quasihole and toroidal ground states) are also the same, indicating that nonabelian statistics is a {\em generic} property of such a paired phase. The strong-pairing phase is an abelian state, and the transition between the two phases involves a bulk Majorana fermion, the mass of which changes sign at the transition. For the d-wave case, we argue that the Haldane-Rezayi state is not the generic behavior of a phase but describes the asymptotics at the critical point between weak and strong pairing, and has gapless fermion excitations in the bulk. In this case the weak-pairing phase is an abelian phase which has been considered previously. In the p-wave case with an unbroken U(1) symmetry, which can be applied to the double layer quantum Hall problem, the weak-pairing phase has the properties of the 331 state, and with nonzero tunneling there is a transition to the Moore-Read phase. The effects of disorder on noninteracting quasiparticles are considered.
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              Anyons in an exactly solved model and beyond

              A spin 1/2 system on a honeycomb lattice is studied. The interactions between nearest neighbors are of XX, YY or ZZ type, depending on the direction of the link; different types of interactions may differ in strength. The model is solved exactly by a reduction to free fermions in a static \(\mathbb{Z}_{2}\) gauge field. A phase diagram in the parameter space is obtained. One of the phases has an energy gap and carries excitations that are Abelian anyons. The other phase is gapless, but acquires a gap in the presence of magnetic field. In the latter case excitations are non-Abelian anyons whose braiding rules coincide with those of conformal blocks for the Ising model. We also consider a general theory of free fermions with a gapped spectrum, which is characterized by a spectral Chern number \(\nu\). The Abelian and non-Abelian phases of the original model correspond to \(\nu=0\) and \(\nu=\pm 1\), respectively. The anyonic properties of excitation depend on \(\nu\bmod 16\), whereas \(\nu\) itself governs edge thermal transport. The paper also provides mathematical background on anyons as well as an elementary theory of Chern number for quasidiagonal matrices.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                2016-06-17
                Article
                1606.05712
                f9d03f9d-d776-4c7c-a363-39b4d91ebaea

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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                Custom metadata
                20 pages, 3 figures
                cond-mat.supr-con cond-mat.mes-hall cond-mat.mtrl-sci cond-mat.str-el

                Condensed matter,Nanophysics
                Condensed matter, Nanophysics

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