Pavan Hosur
Stanford University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Pavan Hosur.
Comptes Rendus Physique | 2013
Pavan Hosur; Xiao-Liang Qi
The last decade has witnessed great advancements in the science and engineering of systems with unconventional band structures, seeded by studies of graphene and topological insulators. While the band structure of graphene simulates massless relativistic electrons in two dimensions, topological insulators have bands that wind non-trivially over momentum space in a certain abstract sense. Over the last couple of years, enthusiasm has been burgeoning in another unconventional and topological (although, not quite in the same sense as topological insulators) phase – the Weyl semimetal. In this phase, electrons mimic Weyl fermions that are well known in high-energy physics, and inherit many of their properties, including an apparent violation of charge conservation known as the chiral anomaly. In this review, we recap some of the unusual transport properties of Weyl semimetals discussed in the literature so far, focusing on signatures whose roots lie in the anomaly. We also mention several proposed realizations of this phase in condensed matter systems, since they were what arguably precipitated activity on Weyl semimetals in the first place.
Journal of High Energy Physics | 2016
Pavan Hosur; Xiao-Liang Qi; Daniel A. Roberts; Beni Yoshida
A bstractWe study chaos and scrambling in unitary channels by considering their entanglement properties as states. Using out-of-time-order correlation functions to diagnose chaos, we characterize the ability of a channel to process quantum information. We show that the generic decay of such correlators implies that any input subsystem must have near vanishing mutual information with almost all partitions of the output. Additionally, we propose the negativity of the tripartite information of the channel as a general diagnostic of scrambling. This measures the delocalization of information and is closely related to the decay of out-of-time-order correlators. We back up our results with numerics in two non-integrable models and analytic results in a perfect tensor network model of chaotic time evolution. These results show that the butterfly effect in quantum systems implies the information-theoretic definition of scrambling.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Yi Zhang; Daniel Bulmash; Pavan Hosur; Andrew C. Potter; Ashvin Vishwanath
We re-examine the question of quantum oscillations from surface Fermi arcs and chiral modes in Weyl semimetals. By introducing two tools - semiclassical phase-space quantization and a numerical implementation of a layered construction of Weyl semimetals - we discover several important generalizations to previous conclusions that were implicitly tailored to the special case of identical Fermi arcs on top and bottom surfaces. We show that the phase-space quantization picture fixes an ambiguity in the previously utilized energy-time quantization approach and correctly reproduces the numerically calculated quantum oscillations for generic Weyl semimetals with distinctly curved Fermi arcs on the two surfaces. Based on these methods, we identify a ‘magic’ magnetic-field angle where quantum oscillations become independent of sample thickness, with striking experimental implications. We also analyze the stability of these quantum oscillations to disorder, and show that the high-field oscillations are expected to persist in samples whose thickness parametrically exceeds the quantum mean free path.
Physical Review X | 2015
Daniel Bulmash; Pavan Hosur; Shou-Cheng Zhang; Xiao-Liang Qi
We derive a scheme for systematically enumerating the responses of gapped as well as gapless systems of free fermions to electromagnetic and strain fields starting from a common parent theory. Using the fact that position operators in the lowest Landau level of a quantum Hall state are canonically conjugate, we consider a massive Dirac fermion in
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018
Areg Ghazaryan; Pavan Hosur; Ashvin Vishwanath; Pouyan Ghaemi
2n
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018
Pranjal Bordia; Fabien Alet; Pavan Hosur
spatial dimensions under
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016
Pavan Hosur
n
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016
Yi Zhang; Daniel Bulmash; Pavan Hosur; Andrew C. Potter; Ashvin Vishwanath
mutually orthogonal magnetic fields and reinterpret physical space in the resulting zeroth Landau level as phase space in
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016
Xiao-Liang Qi; Pavan Hosur
n
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016
Patrik Hlobil; Akash V. Maharaj; Pavan Hosur; M. C. Shapiro; I. R. Fisher; Srinivas Raghu
spatial dimensions. The bulk topological responses of the parent Dirac fermion, given by a Chern-Simons theory, translate into quantized insulator responses, while its edge anomalies characterize the response of gapless systems. Moreover, various physically different responses are seen to be related by the interchange of position and momentum variables. We derive many well-known responses, and demonstrate the utility of our theory by predicting spectral flow along dislocations in Weyl semimetals.