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Topological insulators and superconductors: Tenfold way and dimensional hierarchy

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors constructed representatives of topological insulators and superconductors for all five classes and in arbitrary spatial dimension d, in terms of Dirac Hamiltonians.
Abstract
It has recently been shown that in every spatial dimension there exist precisely five distinct classes of topological insulators or superconductors. Within a given class, the different topological sectors can be distinguished, depending on the case, by a or a topological invariant. This is an exhaustive classification. Here we construct representatives of topological insulators and superconductors for all five classes and in arbitrary spatial dimension d, in terms of Dirac Hamiltonians. Using these representatives we demonstrate how topological insulators (superconductors) in different dimensions and different classes can be related via 'dimensional reduction' by compactifying one or more spatial dimensions (in 'Kaluza–Klein'-like fashion). For -topological insulators (superconductors) this proceeds by descending by one dimension at a time into a different class. The -topological insulators (superconductors), on the other hand, are shown to be lower-dimensional descendants of parent -topological insulators in the same class, from which they inherit their topological properties. The eightfold periodicity in dimension d that exists for topological insulators (superconductors) with Hamiltonians satisfying at least one reality condition (arising from time-reversal or charge-conjugation/particle–hole symmetries) is a reflection of the eightfold periodicity of the spinor representations of the orthogonal groups SO(N) (a form of Bott periodicity). Furthermore, we derive for general spatial dimensions a relation between the topological invariant that characterizes topological insulators and superconductors with chiral symmetry (i.e., the winding number) and the Chern–Simons invariant. For lower-dimensional cases, this formula relates the winding number to the electric polarization (d=1 spatial dimensions) or to the magnetoelectric polarizability (d=3 spatial dimensions). Finally, we also discuss topological field theories describing the spacetime theory of linear responses in topological insulators (superconductors) and study how the presence of inversion symmetry modifies the classification of topological insulators (superconductors).

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Journal ArticleDOI

Topological insulators and superconductors

TL;DR: Topological superconductors are new states of quantum matter which cannot be adiabatically connected to conventional insulators and semiconductors and are characterized by a full insulating gap in the bulk and gapless edge or surface states which are protected by time reversal symmetry.
Journal ArticleDOI

Weyl and Dirac semimetals in three-dimensional solids

TL;DR: Weyl and Dirac semimetals as discussed by the authors are three-dimensional phases of matter with gapless electronic excitations that are protected by topology and symmetry, and they have generated much recent interest.
Journal ArticleDOI

Topological Photonics

TL;DR: Topological photonics is a rapidly emerging field of research in which geometrical and topological ideas are exploited to design and control the behavior of light as mentioned in this paper, which holds great promise for applications.
Journal ArticleDOI

New directions in the pursuit of Majorana fermions in solid state systems.

TL;DR: In this article, a review of recent advances in the condensed matter search for Majorana fermions is presented, which has led many in the field to believe that this quest may soon bear fruit.
Journal ArticleDOI

New directions in the pursuit of Majorana fermions in solid state systems

TL;DR: This review paper highlights recent advances in the condensed matter search for Majorana that have led many in the field to believe that this quest may soon bear fruit and discusses the most remarkable properties of condensed matter Majorana fermions-the non-Abelian exchange statistics that they generate and their associated potential for quantum computation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Topological invariant for superfluid 3He-B and quantum phase transitions

TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider topological invariant describing the vacuum states of 3He-B, which belongs to the special class of time-reversal invariant topological insulators and superfluids.
Journal ArticleDOI

Topological invariant for superfluid 3He-B and quantum phase transitions

TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider topological invariant describing the vacuum states of 3He-B, which belongs to the special class of time-reversal invariant topological insulators and superfluids.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lattice model of a three-dimensional topological singlet superconductor with time-reversal symmetry.

TL;DR: A lattice tight-binding model is constructed that realizes a topologically nontrivial phase of time-reversal invariant singlet superconductors in three spatial dimensions, in which nu=+/-2 and Disorder corresponds to a (nonlocalizing) random SU(2) gauge potential for the surface Dirac fermions.
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Three-dimensional topological phase on the diamond lattice

TL;DR: In this paper, an interacting bosonic model of Kitaev type was proposed on the three-dimensional diamond lattice, where the auxiliary Majorana hopping problem is in a topological superconducting phase characterized by a nonzero winding number introduced by Schnyder et al.
Journal ArticleDOI

Polarization and adiabatic pumping in inhomogeneous crystals.

TL;DR: It is shown that the inhomogeneity-induced polarization can be classified into two parts: a perturbative contribution stemming from a correction to the basis functions and a topological contribution described in terms of the Chern-Simons form of the Berry gauge fields.
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