Table of Contents
Fetching ...

Near linearity of the macroscopic Hall current response in infinitely extended gapped fermion systems

Marius Wesle, Giovanna Marcelli, Tadahiro Miyao, Domenico Monaco, Stefan Teufel

Abstract

We consider an infinitely extended system of fermions on a $d$-dimensional lattice with (magnetic) translation-invariant short-range interactions. We further assume that the system has a locally unique gapped ground state. Physically, this is a model for the bulk of a generic topological insulator at zero temperature, and we are interested in the current response of such a system to a constant external electric field. Using the non-equilibrium almost-stationary states approach, we prove that the longitudinal current density induced by a constant electric field of strength $\varepsilon$ is of order $\mathcal{O}(\varepsilon^\infty)$, i.e. the system is an insulator in the usual sense. For the Hall current density we show instead that it is linear in $\varepsilon$ up to terms of order $\mathcal{O}(\varepsilon^\infty)$. The proportionality factor $σ_\mathrm{H}$ is by definition the Hall conductivity, and we show that it is given by a generalization of the well known double commutator formula to interacting systems. As a by-product of our results, we find that the Hall conductivity is constant within gapped phases, and that for $d=2$ the relevant observable that "measures" the Hall conductivity in experiments, the Hall conductance, not only agrees with $σ_{\mathrm{H}}$ in expectation up to $\mathcal{O}(\varepsilon^\infty)$, but also has vanishing variance. A notable difference to several existing results on the current response in interacting fermion systems is that we consider a macroscopic system exposed to a small constant electric field, rather than to a small voltage drop.

Near linearity of the macroscopic Hall current response in infinitely extended gapped fermion systems

Abstract

We consider an infinitely extended system of fermions on a -dimensional lattice with (magnetic) translation-invariant short-range interactions. We further assume that the system has a locally unique gapped ground state. Physically, this is a model for the bulk of a generic topological insulator at zero temperature, and we are interested in the current response of such a system to a constant external electric field. Using the non-equilibrium almost-stationary states approach, we prove that the longitudinal current density induced by a constant electric field of strength is of order , i.e. the system is an insulator in the usual sense. For the Hall current density we show instead that it is linear in up to terms of order . The proportionality factor is by definition the Hall conductivity, and we show that it is given by a generalization of the well known double commutator formula to interacting systems. As a by-product of our results, we find that the Hall conductivity is constant within gapped phases, and that for the relevant observable that "measures" the Hall conductivity in experiments, the Hall conductance, not only agrees with in expectation up to , but also has vanishing variance. A notable difference to several existing results on the current response in interacting fermion systems is that we consider a macroscopic system exposed to a small constant electric field, rather than to a small voltage drop.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 14 sections, 22 theorems, 261 equations.

Key Result

Proposition 2.1

For each $M\subseteq\mathbb{Z}^d$ there exists a unique linear map called the conditional expectation with respect to $\omega^\mathrm{tr}$, such that It is unital, positive and has the properties

Theorems & Definitions (53)

  • Proposition 2.1: ArakiMoriya2002
  • proof
  • Definition 2.2
  • Lemma 2.3
  • Definition 2.4
  • Lemma 2.5
  • Lemma 2.6
  • Definition 2.7
  • Lemma 2.8
  • Remark 2.9
  • ...and 43 more