Anyons, Zitterbewegung and dynamical phase transitions in topologically nontrivial systems
Frane Luni\'c

TL;DR
This paper explores topological phenomena in various systems, including light propagation, dynamical phase transitions, and synthetic anyons, revealing new effects like Zitterbewegung, topological edge states, and fractional braiding in noninteracting setups.
Contribution
It introduces novel mechanisms for observing topological effects, such as Zitterbewegung in valley modes, nonlinear-driven topological phase transitions, and a scheme for synthetic anyons in noninteracting systems.
Findings
Zitterbewegung arises from nontrivial valley topology.
Dynamical topological phase transitions occur in soliton SSH lattices.
Synthetic anyons can be created and manipulated using localized probes.
Abstract
Nontrivial topology in physical systems is the driving force behind many phenomena. Notably, phases of matter must be classified in part by their topological properties. Phases with topological order (TO), such as the fractional quantum Hall effect (QHE), can support anyonic excitations obeying fractional statistics with potential application in topological quantum computing. States lacking intrinsic TO can still be in topological phases provided certain symmetries are imposed. On their own, these symmetry-protected phases do not support anyons, but they can still have other interesting features, such as protected boundary states. In this thesis we present our research into several nontrivial systems. First, we present the results on light propagation in the valley modes of inversion-symmetry broken honeycomb lattices. We find that a rotating spiral pattern, leading to Zitterbewegung,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum and electron transport phenomena · Quantum optics and atomic interactions · Physics of Superconductivity and Magnetism
