General theory of emergent elasticity for second-order topological phase transitions
Yangfan Hu

TL;DR
This paper develops a unified theoretical framework for second-order topological phase transitions based on emergent elasticity and topological stability, linking local topological changes to a variational criterion.
Contribution
It introduces a topologically protected variation of free energy as a criterion for second-order topological phase transitions, unifying topological and Landau paradigms.
Findings
Critical condition for topological transitions is loss of positive-definiteness in a second-order variation.
Analyzed stability of solutions like sine-Gordon kinks and skyrmions in real space.
Studied phonon spectra and band structures in reciprocal space.
Abstract
The raise of the symmetry breaking mechanism by Landau[1] is a landmark in the studies of phase transitions. The Kosterlitz-Thouless phase transition[2-3] and the fractional quantum Hall effect[4], however, are believed to be induced by another mechanism: topology change. Despite rapid development of the theory of topological orders[5-7], a unified theoretical framework describing this new paradigm of phase transition and its relation to the Landau paradigm, is not seen. Here, we establish such a framework based on variational principle, and show that the critical condition for any second-order topological phase transitions is loss of positive-definiteness of a topologically protected second-order variation of the free energy. A topologically protected variation of a field solution is performed with respect to its emergent displacements, which is introduced by constructing an emergent…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMagnetic properties of thin films · Quantum and electron transport phenomena · Mechanical and Optical Resonators
