Complex Wannier centers and drifting Wannier functions in non-Hermitian Hamiltonians
Pedro Fittipaldi de Castro, Yifan Wang, and Wladimir A. Benalcazar

TL;DR
This paper extends topological band theory to non-Hermitian Hamiltonians, introducing complex Wannier centers to analyze their physical implications, symmetry constraints, and potential for experimental verification.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of complex Wannier centers in non-Hermitian systems, linking their properties to symmetry, bulk-boundary correspondence, and experimental realizations.
Findings
Complex Wannier centers acquire physical meaning through reciprocity breaking.
Symmetries constrain the nature of complex Wannier centers, leading to protected configurations.
The Wilson loop's Krein structure predicts edge modes and filling anomalies.
Abstract
The extension of topological band theory to non-Hermitian Hamiltonians with line energy gaps remains largely unexplored, despite early indications of rich underlying physics. In these systems, Wilson loops, the objects characterizing polarization, become nonunitary. Yet, the physical consequences of this nonunitarity have remained unclear. Using biorthonormal quantum mechanics, we introduce the concept of complex Wannier centers, defined from the gauge-invariant eigenvalues of nonunitary Wilson loops. Complex Wannier centers acquire physical meaning through the breaking of reciprocity in their associated Wannier functions. When the centroid of a Wannier function shifts into the complex plane, it acquires an effective momentum offset that produces directional drift over time. We analyze how symmetries constrain complex Wannier centers and identify symmetry-protected Wannier…
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