Three-dimensional topological lattice models with surface anyons
C.W. von Keyserlingk, F. J. Burnell, Steven H. Simon

TL;DR
This paper explores a 3D exactly solvable topological lattice model, the semion model, revealing deconfined surface anyons with semionic braiding, and draws parallels to fractional quantum Hall effects, advancing understanding of topological matter.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the 3D semion model, including ground state degeneracies, excitations, and surface topological order, linking lattice models to effective field theories and quantum Hall phenomena.
Findings
Surface anyons exhibit semionic braiding statistics.
Bulk point defects are confined in pairs, while surface defects are deconfined.
Models can mimic bosonic and fermionic quantum Hall topological orders.
Abstract
We study a class of three dimensional exactly solvable models of topological matter first put forward by Walker and Wang [arXiv:1104.2632v2]. While these are not models of interacting fermions, they may well capture the topological behavior of some strongly correlated systems. In this work we give a full pedagogical treatment of a special simple case of these models, which we call the 3D semion model: We calculate its ground state degeneracies for a variety of boundary conditions, and classify its low-lying excitations. While point defects in the bulk are confined in pairs connected by energetic strings, the surface excitations are more interesting: the model has deconfined point defects pinned to the boundary of the lattice, and these exhibit semionic braiding statistics. The surface physics is reminiscent of a bosonic fractional quantum Hall effect in its topological limit,…
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