Quaternion, harmonic oscillator, and high-dimensional topological states
Congjun Wu

TL;DR
This paper explores the connection between quaternionic analyticity and high-dimensional topological states, revealing how quaternionic wavefunctions relate to Landau levels and topological properties in various dimensions.
Contribution
It establishes a link between quaternionic analyticity and high-dimensional topological states, extending complex analysis concepts to four dimensions and connecting them to physical models.
Findings
Quaternionic analyticity satisfies the Cauchy-Riemann-Fueter condition.
High-dimensional Landau levels exhibit full rotational symmetry and flat dispersions.
Dimensional reduction yields topological states with preserved time-reversal symmetry.
Abstract
Quaternion, an extension of complex number, is the first discovered non-commutative division algebra by William Rowan Hamilton in 1843. In this article, we review the recent progress on building up the connection between the mathematical concept of quaternoinic analyticity and the physics of high-dimensional topological states. Three- and four-dimensional harmonic oscillator wavefunctions are reorganized by the SU(2) Aharanov-Casher gauge potential to yield high-dimensional Landau levels possessing the full rotational symmetries and flat energy dispersions. The lowest Landau level wavefunctions exhibit quaternionic analyticity, satisfying the {\it Cauchy-Riemann-Fueter} condition, which generalizes the two-dimensional complex analyticity to three and four dimensions. It is also the Euclidean version of the helical Dirac and the chiral Weyl equations. After dimensional reductions, these…
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