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Photonic Floquet topological insulators

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TLDR
This work proposes and experimentally demonstrate a photonic topological insulator free of external fields and with scatter-free edge transport—a photonic lattice exhibiting topologically protected transport of visible light on the lattice edges.
Abstract
Topological insulators are a new phase of matter, with the striking property that conduction of electrons occurs only on their surfaces. In two dimensions, electrons on the surface of a topological insulator are not scattered despite defects and disorder, providing robustness akin to that of superconductors. Topological insulators are predicted to have wide-ranging applications in fault-tolerant quantum computing and spintronics. Substantial effort has been directed towards realizing topological insulators for electromagnetic waves. One-dimensional systems with topological edge states have been demonstrated, but these states are zero-dimensional and therefore exhibit no transport properties. Topological protection of microwaves has been observed using a mechanism similar to the quantum Hall effect, by placing a gyromagnetic photonic crystal in an external magnetic field. But because magnetic effects are very weak at optical frequencies, realizing photonic topological insulators with scatter-free edge states requires a fundamentally different mechanism-one that is free of magnetic fields. A number of proposals for photonic topological transport have been put forward recently. One suggested temporal modulation of a photonic crystal, thus breaking time-reversal symmetry and inducing one-way edge states. This is in the spirit of the proposed Floquet topological insulators, in which temporal variations in solid-state systems induce topological edge states. Here we propose and experimentally demonstrate a photonic topological insulator free of external fields and with scatter-free edge transport-a photonic lattice exhibiting topologically protected transport of visible light on the lattice edges. Our system is composed of an array of evanescently coupled helical waveguides arranged in a graphene-like honeycomb lattice. Paraxial diffraction of light is described by a Schrodinger equation where the propagation coordinate (z) acts as 'time'. Thus the helicity of the waveguides breaks z-reversal symmetry as proposed for Floquet topological insulators. This structure results in one-way edge states that are topologically protected from scattering.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Floquet Hopf Insulators.

TL;DR: It is predicted the existence of a Floquet topological insulator in three-dimensional two-band systems, the Floquet Hopf insulator, which possesses two distinct topological invariants, which represents a condensed matter realization of the topology underlying the Witten anomaly in particle physics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Robust and High-Capacity Phononic Communications through Topological Edge States by Discrete Degree-of-Freedom Multiplexing

TL;DR: In this article, the robust edge states along the interfaces between distinct topological classes are used to make progress, and these fault-tolerant edge channels are protected jointly by both pseudospin and valley degrees of freedom, naturally providing doubled information carriers within every channel, and may serve as a building block for large scale phononic circuits and networks.
Journal Article

Three-dimensional Chiral Lattice Fermion in Floquet Systems

TL;DR: It is shown that the Nielsen-Ninomiya no-go theorem still holds on a Floquet lattice, and proposed a realization of purely left- or right-handed Weyl particles on a 3D lattice using a Hamiltonian obtained through dimensional reduction of a four-dimensional quantum Hall system.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nonlocal topological electromagnetic phases of matter

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduced the microscopic theory of photonic band structure and analyzed the symmetries of the atomic lattice, including symmetry-protected topological invariants characterized by spin-1 eigenvalues of the electromagnetic field.
References
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TL;DR: In this paper, the theoretical foundation for topological insulators and superconductors is reviewed and recent experiments are described in which the signatures of topologically insulators have been observed.
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Quantum spin Hall effect in graphene

TL;DR: Graphene is converted from an ideal two-dimensional semimetallic state to a quantum spin Hall insulator and the spin and charge conductances in these edge states are calculated and the effects of temperature, chemical potential, Rashba coupling, disorder, and symmetry breaking fields are discussed.
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New Method for High-Accuracy Determination of the Fine-Structure Constant Based on Quantized Hall Resistance

TL;DR: In this article, the Hall voltage of a two-dimensional electron gas, realized with a silicon metal-oxide-semiconductor field effect transistor, was measured and it was shown that the Hall resistance at particular, experimentally well-defined surface carrier concentrations has fixed values which depend only on the fine-structure constant and speed of light, and is insensitive to the geometry of the device.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantized Hall conductance in a two-dimensional periodic potential

TL;DR: In this article, the Hall conductance of a two-dimensional electron gas has been studied in a uniform magnetic field and a periodic substrate potential, where the Kubo formula is written in a form that makes apparent the quantization when the Fermi energy lies in a gap.
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