Gravitational Anomalies and Thermal Hall effect in Topological Insulators
Michael Stone

TL;DR
This paper critically examines the gravitational and thermal Hall effects in topological insulators, revealing that tidal forces, rather than uniform gravitational fields, induce energy-momentum flux related to gravitational anomalies.
Contribution
It clarifies the role of gravitational field gradients in inducing energy-momentum flow and connects this to domain-wall gravitational anomalies via the Callan-Harvey mechanism.
Findings
Gravitational Hall effect requires tidal forces, not uniform fields.
Surface energy-momentum flux matches covariant gravitational anomaly.
The covariant anomaly is consistent regardless of the connection used.
Abstract
It has been suggested that a temperature gradient will induce a Leduc-Righi, or thermal Hall, current in the Majorana quasiparticles localized on the surface of class DIII topological insulators, and that the magnitude of this current can be related {\it via} an Einstein argument to a Hall-like energy flux induced by gravity. We critically examine this idea, and argue that the gravitational Hall effect is more complicated than its familiar analogue. A conventional Hall current is generated by a {\it uniform} electric field, but computing the flux from the gravitational Chern-Simons functional shows that gravitational field {\it gradients} - i.e. tidal forces - are needed to induce a energy-momentum flow. We relate the surface energy-momentum flux to a domain-wall gravitational anomaly {\it via} the Callan-Harvey inflow mechanism. We stress that the gauge invariance of the combined…
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