Professor
Joel E. Moore
Department of Physics
University of California, Berkeley
New Topologically Ordered Phases of Condensed Matter
Abstract:
Much
of condensed matter physics is concerned with understanding how different
kinds of order emerge from interactions between a large number of simple constituents.
In ordered phases such as crystals, magnets, and superfluids, the order is
understood through "symmetry breaking": in a crystal, for example,
the continuous symmetries of space under rotations and translations are not
reflected in the ground state. A major discovery of the 1980s was that electrons
confined to two dimensions and in a strong magnetic field exhibit a completely
different, "topological" type of order that underlies the quantum
Hall effect. A discovery in the last few years is that topological order also
occurs in some three-dimensional materials, dubbed "topological insulators",
in zero magnetic field. Spin-orbit coupling, an intrinsic property of all
solids, drives the formation of the topological state.
This talk will explain what topological order means, how topological insulators
were discovered, and how they realize the "axion electrodynamics"
studied by particle physicists in the 1980s. Two possible applications of
these new materials are discussed in closing.