Torsional Landau levels and geometric anomalies in condensed matter Weyl systems
Sara Laurila, Jaakko Nissinen

TL;DR
This paper explores how geometric and torsional effects influence Weyl quasiparticles in condensed matter, revealing anomalies and transport phenomena linked to emergent spacetime structures and finite-momentum effects.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of torsional Landau levels and the Nieh-Yan anomaly in condensed matter Weyl systems, highlighting finite-momentum effects and UV cutoff implications.
Findings
Torsional Landau levels arise at finite momenta with a UV cutoff.
Emergent spacetime geometries induce chiral and axial anomalies.
Torsion affects chiral transport and thermal phenomena in Weyl materials.
Abstract
We consider the role of coordinate dependent tetrads ("Fermi velocities"), momentum space geometry, and torsional Landau levels (LLs) in condensed matter systems with low-energy Weyl quasiparticles. In contrast to their relativistic counterparts, they arise at finite momenta and an explicit cutoff to the linear spectrum. Via the universal coupling of tetrads to momentum, they experience geometric chiral and axial anomalies with gravitational character. More precisely, at low-energy, the fermions experience background fields corresponding to emergent anisotropic Riemann-Cartan and Newton-Cartan spacetimes, depending on the form of the low-energy dispersion. On these backgrounds, we show how torsion and the Nieh-Yan (NY) anomaly appear in condensed matter Weyl systems with a ultraviolet (UV) parameter with dimensions of momentum. The torsional NY anomaly arises in simplest terms from the…
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