Higher-order Skin Effect through a Hermitian-non-Hermitian Correspondence \\ and Its Observation in an Acoustic Kagome Lattice
ORAL
Abstract
The non-Hermitian skin effect (NHSE) is a distinctive topological phenomenon observed in non-Hermitian systems. Recently, there has been considerable interest in exploring higher-order NHSE occurrences in two and three dimensions. In such systems, topological edge states collapse into a corner while bulk states remain delocalized.
Through a Hermitian-non-Hermitian correspondence, this study predicts and experimentally observes the higher-order NHSE in an acoustic Kagome lattice possessing nonreciprocal hoppings. By rotating the frequency spectrum and employing complex-frequency excitation techniques, we observe the localization of acoustic energy towards a corner of the lattice in the topologically nontrivial phase, even when the source is located far from that corner. In contrast, the acoustic energy spreads out when excited at the frequencies hosting the bulk states. These observations are unequivocal evidence of the higher-order NHSE.
Through a Hermitian-non-Hermitian correspondence, this study predicts and experimentally observes the higher-order NHSE in an acoustic Kagome lattice possessing nonreciprocal hoppings. By rotating the frequency spectrum and employing complex-frequency excitation techniques, we observe the localization of acoustic energy towards a corner of the lattice in the topologically nontrivial phase, even when the source is located far from that corner. In contrast, the acoustic energy spreads out when excited at the frequencies hosting the bulk states. These observations are unequivocal evidence of the higher-order NHSE.
*W. A. B. thanks the support of startup funds from Emory University. Y. J. thanks the support of startup funds from Penn State University and NSF awards 2039463 and 1951221. J. L. gratefully acknowledges the financial support by National Natural Science Foundation of China (12274221).
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Publication: https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.01516
Presenters
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Pedro Fittipaldi de Castro
- Emory University