Weyl points on non-orientable Brillouin zones: Nielsen-Ninomiya, Fermi arcs and Z2 topological charge

ORAL

Abstract

Weyl fermions are chiral particles in high-energy physics that can also emerge as low-energy quasiparticles near three-dimensional band crossing points. They are subject to the Nielsen--Ninomiya "no-go" theorem when placed on a lattice, requiring their total chirality to vanish. This constraint results from the topology of the (orientable) manifold on which they exist. In this talk, we discuss to what extent the concepts of topology and chirality of Weyl points remain well-defined when the underlying manifold is non-orientable. We show that this setting renders chirality a more subtle concept, as well as allowing for systems with a non-zero net chirality. Furthermore, we discover that Weyl points on non-orientable manifolds carry an additional Z2 invariant, satisfying a similar no-go theorem. We implement such Weyl points by constructing tight-binding models with a momentum-space non-symmorphic symmetry. Finally, we experimentally realize their phenomenology in a photonic platform with synthetic momenta.

* I thank and acknowledge support from the Henry W. Kendall Fellowship and the Whiteman Fellowship.

Presenters

  • Andre G Fonseca

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Authors

  • Andre G Fonseca

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Sachin Vaidya

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Thomas Christensen

    Technical University of Denmark

  • Mikael C Rechtsman

    Pennsylvania State University

  • Taylor L Hughes

    University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

  • Marin Soljacic

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT