Topological quantum matter with cold atoms
Dan-Wei Zhang, Yan-Qing Zhu, Y. X. Zhao, Hui Yan, and Shi-Liang Zhu

TL;DR
This review discusses the realization and probing of topological quantum phases using cold atoms, highlighting recent theoretical and experimental advances in simulating models from condensed matter physics.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of topological phases in cold atomic systems, including models, methods, and experimental techniques, emphasizing recent developments and future directions.
Findings
Realization of topological models in cold atoms
Development of methods to probe topological invariants
Experimental demonstrations of key topological phases
Abstract
This is an introductory review of the physics of topological quantum matter with cold atoms. Topological quantum phases, originally discovered and investigated in condensed matter physics, have recently been explored in a range of different systems, which produced both fascinating physics findings and exciting opportunities for applications. Among the physical systems that have been considered to realize and probe these intriguing phases, ultracold atoms become promising platforms due to their high flexibility and controllability. Quantum simulation of topological phases with cold atomic gases is a rapidly evolving field, and recent theoretical and experimental developments reveal that some toy models originally proposed in condensed matter physics have been realized with this artificial quantum system. The purpose of this article is to introduce these developments. The article begins…
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