Quantum topology in the ultrastrong coupling regime
C. A. Downing, A. J. Toghill

TL;DR
This paper explores how ultrastrong coupling affects topological states in a quantum system, revealing novel edge states and vacuum phenomena, thus opening new avenues in quantum topological research.
Contribution
It demonstrates the impact of ultrastrong coupling on topological states in a one-dimensional array, introducing anti-edge states and vacuum renormalizations.
Findings
Discovery of unusual topological edge states
Introduction of anti-edge states in ultrastrong regime
Observation of geometric-dependent vacuum renormalizations
Abstract
The coupling between two or more objects can generally be categorized as strong or weak. In cavity quantum electrodynamics for example, when the coupling strength is larger than the loss rate the coupling is termed strong, and otherwise it is dubbed weak. Ultrastrong coupling, where the interaction energy is of the same order of magnitude as the bare energies of the uncoupled objects, presents a new paradigm for quantum physics and beyond. As a consequence profound changes to well established phenomena occur, for instance the ground state in an ultrastrongly coupled system is not empty but hosts virtual excitations due to the existence of processes which do not conserve the total number of excitations. The implications of ultrastrong coupling for quantum topological systems, where the number of excitations are typically conserved, remain largely unknown despite the great utility of…
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