Chiral anomaly without Landau levels

ORAL

Abstract

We study the chiral anomaly in disordered Weyl semimetals, where the broken translational symmetry prevents the direct application of Nielson and Ninomiya’s mechanism. In the weak disorder regime, there exists rare regions of the random potential where the disorder strength is locally strong, this gives rise to quasi-localized resonances. These rare states are non-perturbative and thus their effect on the chiral anomaly is unknown. We numerically show that rare states do not affect the chiral anomaly only in the case of a single Weyl node, but weakens the anomaly in a quantized way when there are two nodes without inter-node scattering. When the disorder strength is strong and the system is deep in the diffusive regime, the chiral Landau level itself is not well defined. In this limit, we analytically use the supersymmetry method and find an additional Chern-Simons (CS) term in the effective action which is not present in non-topological systems. This CS term results in a non-zero average level velocity: using numerical calculations we show that this as an indicator of the chiral anomaly in the presence of strong disorder when the system can no longer be described using band theory.

Presenters

  • Junhyun Lee

    University of Maryland, Condensed Matter Theory Center, University of Maryland, Physics, Univ of Maryland-College Park

Authors

  • Junhyun Lee

    University of Maryland, Condensed Matter Theory Center, University of Maryland, Physics, Univ of Maryland-College Park

  • Jed Pixley

    Physics, Rutgers University, Physics and Astronomy, Rutgers University, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Rutgers University, Rutgers University, Physics, Rutgers

  • Jay Sau

    Univ of Maryland-College Park, Department of Physics, Condensed Matter Theory Center and Joint Quantum Institute, Univ of Maryland-College Park, University of Maryland, Condensed Matter Theory Center, University of Maryland, Physics, Univ of Maryland-College Park, Department of Physics, University of Maryland