Condensed Matter Seminar "Exploiting geometry and disorder in exotic quantum states of matter"

Rudro Biswas, Purdue University

 

Quantum Hall states are a prominent example of exotic topological states of matter. The signature property of QH states, namely, the quantization of Hall conductance, is well-appreciated, and independent of sample-specific details, to the extent that it is used for precise measurements of fundamental constants. Less well understood, and at the frontier of current research, is how the geometry of these states responds to gravitational perturbations, i.e., deformations to the real space manifold they are embedded in, and what if any universal signatures characterize this response. In this talk I will discuss how remarkable new universal behaviors emerge when probing the gravitational response of quantum Hall states. By exploiting novel aspects of the quantum geometry of charged particles in a magnetic field, I will show that the these responses can be characterized not only by considering QH states in curved spaces, but equivalently, by placing them in non-uniform electric fields, thus facilitating experimental tests of these results. I will conclude by noting how the quantum geometry can be combined with the theory of coherent states to provide an analytical route, hitherto elusive, for deriving the properties of fractional quantum Hall phases from experimentally relevant microscopic Hamiltonians.

 

Thursday, September 26, 2019 at 12:00pm to 1:00pm

Duane Physics and Astrophysics, G126
2000 Colorado Avenue, Boulder, CO 80309

Event Type

Colloquium/Seminar

College, School & Unit

Arts & Sciences

Website

https://physicscourses.colorado.edu/s...

Group
Physics
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