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      Symmetry Protected Topological Superfluids and Superconductors --- From the Basics to \(^3\)He ---

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          Abstract

          In this article, we give a comprehensive review of recent progress in research on symmetry-protected topological superfluids and topological crystalline superconductors, and their physical consequences such as helical and chiral Majorana fermions. We start this review article with the minimal model that captures the essence of such topological materials. The central part of this article is devoted to the superfluid \(^3\)He, which serves as a rich repository of novel topological quantum phenomena originating from the intertwining of symmetries and topologies. In particular, it is emphasized that the quantum fluid confined to nanofabricated geometries possesses multiple superfluid phases composed of the symmetry-protected topological superfluid B-phase, the A-phase as a Weyl superfluid, the nodal planar and polar phases, and the crystalline ordered stripe phase. All these phases generate noteworthy topological phenomena, including topological phase transitions concomitant with spontaneous symmetry breaking, Majorana fermions, Weyl superfluidity, emergent supersymmetry, spontaneous edge mass and spin currents, topological Fermi arcs, and exotic quasiparticles bound to topological defects. In relation to the mass current carried by gapless edge states, we also briefly review a longstanding issue on the intrinsic angular momentum paradox in \(^3\)He-A. Moreover, we share the current status of our knowledge on the topological aspects of unconventional superconductors, such as the heavy-fermion superconductor UPt\(_3\) and superconducting doped topological insulators, in connection with the superfluid \(^3\)He.

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          Topological insulators in Bi2Se3, Bi2Te3 and Sb2Te3 with a single Dirac cone on the surface

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            Signatures of Majorana fermions in hybrid superconductor-semiconductor nanowire devices

            Majorana fermions are particles identical to their own antiparticles. They have been theoretically predicted to exist in topological superconductors. We report electrical measurements on InSb nanowires contacted with one normal (Au) and one superconducting electrode (NbTiN). Gate voltages vary electron density and define a tunnel barrier between normal and superconducting contacts. In the presence of magnetic fields of order 100 mT we observe bound, mid-gap states at zero bias voltage. These bound states remain fixed to zero bias even when magnetic fields and gate voltages are changed over considerable ranges. Our observations support the hypothesis of Majorana fermions in nanowires coupled to superconductors.
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              Classification of topological insulators and superconductors in three spatial dimensions

              We systematically study topological phases of insulators and superconductors (SCs) in 3D. We find that there exist 3D topologically non-trivial insulators or SCs in 5 out of 10 symmetry classes introduced by Altland and Zirnbauer within the context of random matrix theory. One of these is the recently introduced Z_2 topological insulator in the symplectic symmetry class. We show there exist precisely 4 more topological insulators. For these systems, all of which are time-reversal (TR) invariant in 3D, the space of insulating ground states satisfying certain discrete symmetry properties is partitioned into topological sectors that are separated by quantum phase transitions. 3 of the above 5 topologically non-trivial phases can be realized as TR invariant SCs, and in these the different topological sectors are characterized by an integer winding number defined in momentum space. When such 3D topological insulators are terminated by a 2D surface, they support a number (which may be an arbitrary non-vanishing even number for singlet pairing) of Dirac fermion (Majorana fermion when spin rotation symmetry is completely broken) surface modes which remain gapless under arbitrary perturbations that preserve the characteristic discrete symmetries. In particular, these surface modes completely evade Anderson localization. These topological phases can be thought of as 3D analogues of well known paired topological phases in 2D such as the chiral p-wave SC. In the corresponding topologically non-trivial and topologically trivial 3D phases, the wavefunctions exhibit markedly distinct behavior. When an electromagnetic U(1) gauge field and fluctuations of the gap functions are included in the dynamics, the SC phases with non-vanishing winding number possess non-trivial topological ground state degeneracies.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                2015-08-04
                2016-01-20
                Article
                10.7566/JPSJ.85.022001
                1508.00787
                c198428d-cff7-4c1a-969d-1ab9d657e117

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

                History
                Custom metadata
                YITP-15-67
                J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. 85, 022001 (2016)
                82 pages, 33 figures
                cond-mat.supr-con

                Condensed matter
                Condensed matter

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