Edge State Dynamics in Bosonic Fractional Chern Insulators

ORAL

Abstract

The experimental realization of the Harper-Hofstadter model in ultra-cold atomic gases has placed fractional states of matter in these systems within reach---a fractional Chern insulator state (FCI) is expected to emerge for sufficiently strong interactions when half-filling the lowest band. The experimental setups naturally allow to probe the dynamics of this topological state, yet little is known about its out-of-equilibrium properties. We explore, using density matrix renormalization group (DMRG) simulations, the response of the FCI state to spatially localized perturbations. After confirming the static properties of the phase we show that the characteristic, gapless features are clearly visible in the edge dynamics. We find that a local edge perturbation in this model propagates chirally independent of the perturbation strength. This contrasts the behavior of single particle models with counter-propagating edge states, such as the non-interacting Harper-Hofstadter model, where the chirality is manifest only for weak perturbations. Additionally, our simulations show that there is inevitable density leakage into the bulk, preventing a naive chiral Luttinger theory interpretation of the dynamics.

Presenters

  • Xiaoyu Dong

    Max-Planck-Institut für Physik komplexer Systeme

Authors

  • Xiaoyu Dong

    Max-Planck-Institut für Physik komplexer Systeme

  • Adolfo Grushin

    Physics, Univ of California - Berkeley, Physics, University of California, Berkeley, CNRS, Neel Institute, Department of Physics, University of California, Institute Neel, CNRS

  • Johannes Motruk

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and University of California, Berkeley, University of California Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • Frank Pollmann

    Department of Physics, Technical University of Munich, Physics, TUM, TU München, Technical University of Munich, Physics Department , Technische Universität München, Max-Planck-Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems