Gauge nonlocality in planar quantum-coherent systems
K. Moulopoulos

TL;DR
This paper explores how quantum-coherent systems are affected by adjacent magnetic or electric fields through gauge nonlocality, revealing new topological effects and proposing experimental detection methods.
Contribution
It identifies and explains gauge nonlocality in quantum systems, removing gauge ambiguities, and demonstrates how external fields can induce topological phenomena without direct contact.
Findings
Gauge nonlocality affects quantum coherence in extended systems.
Proposed experimental procedures to detect nonlocal effects.
Revealed implications for solid state physics and topological phenomena.
Abstract
It is shown that a system with quantum coherence can be nontrivially affected by adjacent magnetic or adjacent time-varying electric field regions, with this proximity (or remote) influence having a gauge origin. This is implicit (although overlooked) in numerous works on extended systems with inhomogeneous magnetic fields (with either conventional or Dirac materials) but is generally plagued with an apparent gauge ambiguity. The origin of this annoying feature is explained and it is shown how it can be theoretically removed, leading to macroscopic quantizations (quantized Dirac monopoles, integral quantum Hall effect, quantized magnetoelectric phenomena in topological insulators). Apart however from serving as a theoretical probe of macroscopic quantizations, there are cases (experimental conditions, clarified here) when this "gauge nonlocality" does not really suffer from any…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTopological Materials and Phenomena · Quantum and electron transport phenomena · Quantum, superfluid, helium dynamics
