Fermion condensation and super pivotal categories
David Aasen, Ethan Lake, Kevin Walker

TL;DR
This paper develops a framework for fermion condensation in topological phases, introducing new mathematical tools and examples to understand fermionic topological order and excitations.
Contribution
It provides a systematic method for fermion condensation in bosonic phases, generalizes the tube category to fermionic theories, and explores the effects on topological data and excitations.
Findings
Constructed a fermionic tube category for quasiparticle computation.
Proved a fermionic Verlinde formula relating fusion and modular data.
Analyzed fermion condensation in Ising, SO(3)_6, and E_6 theories.
Abstract
We study fermionic topological phases using the technique of fermion condensation. We give a prescription for performing fermion condensation in bosonic topological phases which contain a fermion. Our approach to fermion condensation can roughly be understood as coupling the parent bosonic topological phase to a phase of physical fermions, and condensing pairs of physical and emergent fermions. There are two distinct types of objects in fermionic theories, which we call "m-type" and "q-type" particles. The endomorphism algebras of q-type particles are complex Clifford algebras, and they have no analogues in bosonic theories. We construct a fermionic generalization of the tube category, which allows us to compute the quasiparticle excitations in fermionic topological phases. We then prove a series of results relating data in condensed theories to data in their parent theories; for…
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