THz response and colossal Kerr rotation from the surface states of the topological insulator Bi$_2$Se$_3$
R. Vald\'es Aguilar, A. V. Stier, W. Liu, L. S. Bilbro, D. K. George,, N. Bansal, L. Wu, J. Cerne, A. G. Markelz, S. Oh, N. P. Armitage

TL;DR
This paper reports a large Kerr rotation effect from the surface states of Bi$_2$Se$_3$, demonstrating the intrinsic electromagnetic response of topologically protected surface states in a topological insulator.
Contribution
It provides the first experimental observation of giant Kerr rotation caused by topological surface states in a 3D topological insulator, confirming theoretical predictions.
Findings
Kerr rotation as large as 65 degrees observed
Surface states dominate the magneto-optical response
Evidence supports the intrinsic response of topological surface states
Abstract
Ordered states of matter are typically categorized by their broken symmetries. With the ordering of spins in a ferromagnet or the freezing of a liquid into a solid, the loss of symmetry distinguishes the ordered state from the disordered one. In contrast, topological states are distinguished by specific \textit{topological} properties that are encoded in their quantum mechanical wavefunctions. Frequently, a consequence of these properties is that there are robust "topologically protected" states on the sample's boundaries. The edge states of the quantum Hall effect (QHE) are the classic example. In the last few years, it was realized that another class of such topological matter may exist in 3D band insulators with large spin-orbit interaction. These so-called topological insulators are predicted to host robust surface states, which exhibit a number of interesting properties including…
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