Topological superfluidity is an important concept in electronic materials as well as ultracold atomic gases. However, although progress has been made by hybridizing superconductors with topological substrates, the search for a material-natural or artificial-that intrinsically exhibits topological superfluidity has been ongoing since the discovery of the superfluid He-A phase. Here we report evidence for a globally chiral atomic superfluid, induced by interaction-driven time-reversal symmetry breaking in the second Bloch band of an optical lattice with hexagonal boron nitride geometry. This realizes a long-lived Bose-Einstein condensate of Rb atoms beyond present limits to orbitally featureless scenarios in the lowest Bloch band. Time-of-flight and band mapping measurements reveal that the local phases and orbital rotations of atoms are spontaneously ordered into a vortex array, showing evidence of the emergence of global angular momentum across the entire lattice. A phenomenological effective model is used to capture the dynamics of Bogoliubov quasi-particle excitations above the ground state, which are shown to exhibit a topological band structure. The observed bosonic phase is expected to exhibit phenomena that are conceptually distinct from, but related to, the quantum anomalous Hall effect in electronic condensed matter.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-03702-0 | DOI Listing |
Nat Phys
August 2024
Department of Physics, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA USA.
Commun Mater
October 2024
PSI Center for Neutron and Muon Sciences CNM, 5232 Villigen PSI, Switzerland.
The two-dimensional kagome lattice is an experimental playground for novel physical phenomena, from frustrated magnetism and topological matter to chiral charge order and unconventional superconductivity. A newly identified kagome superconductor, TaVSi has recently gained attention for possessing a record high critical temperature, = 7.5 K for kagome metals at ambient pressure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
August 2024
Department of Physics and Astronomy, Center for Quantum Research and Technology, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK 73069.
Excitons are the neutral quasiparticles that form when Coulomb interactions create bound states between electrons and holes. Due to their bosonic nature, excitons are expected to condense and exhibit superfluidity at sufficiently low temperatures. In interacting Chern insulators, excitons may inherit the nontrivial topology and quantum geometry from the underlying electron wavefunctions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phys Condens Matter
July 2024
Department of Physics, University of California, Merced, CA 95343, United States of America.
The spatial Kibble-Zurek mechanism is applied to the Kitaev chain with inhomogeneous pairing interactions that vanish in half of the lattice and result in a quantum critical point separating the superfluid and normal-gas phases in real space. The weakly-interacting BCS theory predicts scaling behavior of the penetration of the pair wavefunction into the normal-gas region different from conventional power-law results due to the non-analytic dependence of the BCS order parameter on the interaction. The Bogoliubov-de Gennes (BdG) equation produces numerical results confirming the scaling behavior and hints complications in the strong-interaction regime.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev Lett
June 2024
Theoretical Division, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, New Mexico 87545, USA.
The Kibble-Zurek mechanism (KZM) describes the nonequilibrium dynamics and topological defect formation in systems undergoing second-order phase transitions. KZM has found applications in fields such as cosmology and condensed matter physics. However, it is generally not suitable for describing first-order phase transitions.
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