Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where S. A. Parameswaran is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by S. A. Parameswaran.


Nature Physics | 2013

Topological order and absence of band insulators at integer filling in non-symmorphic crystals

S. A. Parameswaran; Ari M. Turner; Daniel P. Arovas; Ashvin Vishwanath

A crystal is a band insulator if the energy bands are filled with electrons. Partially filled bands result in a metal, or sometimes a Mott insulator when interactions are strong. A study now shows that for many crystalline structures, the Mott insulator is the only possible insulating state, even for filled bands.


Annalen der Physik | 2017

Eigenstate phase transitions and the emergence of universal dynamics in highly excited states

S. A. Parameswaran; Andrew C. Potter; Romain Vasseur

We review recent advances in understanding the universal scaling properties of non-equilibrium phase transitions in non-ergodic disordered systems. We discuss dynamical critical points (also known as eigenstate phase transitions) between different many-body localized (MBL) phases, and between MBL and thermal phases.


Physical Review X | 2015

Current at a distance and resonant transparency in weyl semimetals

Yuval Baum; Erez Berg; S. A. Parameswaran; Ady Stern

Surface Fermi arcs are the most prominent manifestation of the topological nature of Weyl semimetals. In the presence of a static magnetic field oriented perpendicular to the sample surface, their existence leads to unique inter-surface cyclotron orbits. We propose two experiments which directly probe the Fermi arcs: a magnetic field dependent non-local DC voltage and sharp resonances in the transmission of electromagnetic waves at frequencies controlled by the field. We show that these experiments do not rely on quantum mechanical phase coherence, which renders them far more robust and experimentally accessible than quantum effects. We also comment on the applicability of these ideas to Dirac semimetals.


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2012

Fractional Chern Insulators and the

Rahul Roy; S. A. Parameswaran; S. L. Sondhi

A set of recent results indicates that fractionally filled bands of Chern insulators in two dimensions support fractional quantum Hall states analogous to those found in fractionally filled Landau levels. We provide an understanding of these results by examining the algebra of Chern band projected density operators. We find that this algebra closes at long wavelengths and for constant Berry curvature, whereupon it is isomorphic to the W-Infinity algebra of lowest Landau level projected densities first identified by Girvin, MacDonald and Platzman [Phys. Rev. B 33, 2481 (1986).] For Hamiltonians projected to the Chern band this provides a route to replicating lowest Landau level physics on the lattice.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

W_\infty

D. A. Abanin; S. A. Parameswaran; S. L. Sondhi

Quantum Hall states that result from interaction induced lifting of the eightfold degeneracy of the zeroth Landau level in bilayer graphene are considered. We show that at even filling factors electric charge is injected into the system in the form of charge 2e Skyrmions. This is a rare example of binding of charges in a system with purely repulsive interactions. We calculate the Skyrmion energy and size as a function of the effective Zeeman interaction and discuss the signatures of the charge 2e Skyrmions in the scanning probe experiments.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Algebra

Itamar Kimchi; S. A. Parameswaran; Ari M. Turner; Fa Wang; Ashvin Vishwanath

Significance Symmetries are increasingly shown to play various key roles determining the possible phases in condensed matter systems. We study bosonic particles (including electron Cooper pairs) living on the vertices of a honeycomb lattice at a density of 1/2 per site. Here the honeycomb symmetries forbid the usual fermionic band insulating state, and the conventional Mott (“strongly interacting”) insulator involves a whole number of particles frozen on each site, suggesting that featureless (fully symmetric) insulators might not exist in this system. Nevertheless, we explicitly construct quantum states and demonstrate that they are examples of featureless insulators on the honeycomb lattice at 1/2 site filling, with a procedure generalizing to lattices with symmorphic symmetry groups. Within the Landau paradigm, phases of matter are distinguished by spontaneous symmetry breaking. Implicit here is the assumption that a completely symmetric state exists: a paramagnet. At zero temperature such quantum featureless insulators may be forbidden, triggering either conventional order or topological order with fractionalized excitations. Such is the case for interacting particles when the particle number per unit cell, f, is not an integer. However, can lattice symmetries forbid featureless insulators even at integer f? An especially relevant case is the honeycomb (graphene) lattice—where free spinless fermions at (the two sites per unit cell mean is half-filling per site) are always metallic. Here we present wave functions for bosons, and a related spin-singlet wave function for spinful electrons, on the honeycomb lattice and demonstrate via quantum to classical mappings that they do form featureless Mott insulators. The construction generalizes to symmorphic lattices at integer f in any dimension. Our results explicitly demonstrate that in this case, despite the absence of a noninteracting insulator at the same filling, lack of order at zero temperature does not imply fractionalization.


Physical Review B | 2017

Charge 2e skyrmions in bilayer graphene.

S. A. Parameswaran; Sarang Gopalakrishnan

In one-dimensional electronic systems with strong repulsive interactions, charge excitations propagate much faster than spin excitations. Such systems therefore have an intermediate temperature range [termed the “spin-incoherent Luttinger liquid” (SILL) regime] where charge excitations are “cold” (i.e., have low entropy) whereas spin excitations are “hot.” We explore the effects of charge-sector disorder in the SILL regime in the absence of external sources of equilibration. We argue that the disorder localizes all charge-sector excitations; however, spin excitations are protected against full localization, and act as a heat bath facilitating charge and energy transport on asymptotically long time scales. The charge, spin, and energy conductivities are widely separated from one another. The dominant carriers of energy in much of the SILL regime are neither charge nor spin excitations, but neutral “phonon” modes, which undergo an unconventional form of hopping transport that we discuss. We comment on the applicability of these ideas to experiments and numerical simulations.


Physical Review B | 2014

Featureless and nonfractionalized Mott insulators on the honeycomb lattice at 1/2 site filling

Michael P. Zaletel; S. A. Parameswaran; Andreas Rüegg; Ehud Altman

We study the superfluid and insulating phases of interacting bosons on the triangular lattice with an inverted dispersion, corresponding to frustrated hopping between sites. The resulting single-particle dispersion has multiple minima at nonzero wave vectors in momentum space, in contrast to the unique zero-wave-vector minimum of the unfrustrated problem. As a consequence, the superfluid phase is unstable against developing additional chiral order that breaks time-reversal (


Physical Review A | 2015

Spin-catalyzed hopping conductivity in disordered strongly interacting quantum wires

Kevin Singh; Kush Saha; S. A. Parameswaran; David Weld

\mathcal{T}


Physical Review B | 2017

Chiral Bosonic Mott Insulator on the Frustrated Triangular Lattice

Rahul Nandkishore; S. A. Parameswaran

) and parity (

Collaboration


Dive into the S. A. Parameswaran's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Romain Vasseur

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrew C. Potter

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ari M. Turner

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Itamar Kimchi

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

B. Spivak

University of Washington

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge