Berry phase in the rigid rotor: the emergent physics of odd antiferromagnets
Subhankar Khatua, R. Ganesh

TL;DR
This paper explores how Berry phases influence the quantum states of the rigid rotor, revealing a connection to odd antiferromagnets with specific spin configurations, leading to novel spectral properties.
Contribution
It demonstrates that Berry phases induce anti-periodic boundary conditions in the rigid rotor, linking topological effects to the low-energy physics of certain quantum antiferromagnets with odd vertices.
Findings
Berry phase of π causes anti-periodic states in the rotor
Quantum spectra of odd-vertex antiferromagnets match rotor models
Half-integer spins lead to Berry phase effects in spectra
Abstract
The rigid rotor is a classic problem in quantum mechanics, describing the dynamics of a rigid body with its centre of mass held fixed. The configuration space of this problem is , the space of all rotations in three dimensions. This is a topological space with two types of closed loops: trivial loops that can be adiabatically shrunk to a point and non-trivial loops that cannot. In the traditional formulation of the problem, stationary states are periodic over both types of closed loops. However, periodicity conditions may change if Berry phases are introduced. We argue that time-reversal-symmetry allows for only one new possibility -- a Berry phase of attached to all non-trivial loops. We derive the corresponding stationary states by exploiting the connection between and spaces. The solutions are anti-periodic over any non-trivial loop, i.e., stationary…
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