TY - JOUR
T1 - Theory of oblique topological insulators
AU - Moy, Benjamin
AU - Goldman, Hart
AU - Sohal, Ramanjit
AU - Fradkin, Eduardo
N1 - We especially thank Fiona Burnell and Ho Tat Lam for enlightening conversations during the development of this work. We also thank Arkya Chatterjee, Yu-An Chen, Tarun Grover, Chao-Ming Jian, Ethan Lake, John McGreevy, Salvatore Pace, Nathan Seiberg, T. Senthil, Steven Simon, Jun Ho Son, Nathanan Tantivasadakarn, and Xiao-Gang Wen for discussions and comments on the manuscript. HG is supported by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation EPiQS Initiative through Grant No. GBMF8684 at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. RS was supported in part by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) [funding reference number 6799-516762-2018]. This work was also supported in part by the US National Science Foundation through the NSF under grant No. DMR-1725401 at the University of Illinois (BM, EF).
PY - 2023/2
Y1 - 2023/2
N2 - A long-standing problem in the study of topological phases of matter has been to understand the types of fractional topological insulator (FTI) phases possible in 3+1 dimensions. Unlike ordinary topological insulators of free fermions, FTI phases are characterized by fractional Θ-angles, long-range entanglement, and fractionalization. Starting from a simple family of ZN lattice gauge theories due to Cardy and Rabinovici, we develop a class of FTI phases based on the physical mechanism of oblique confinement and the modern language of generalized global symmetries. We dub these phases oblique topological insulators. Oblique TIs arise when dyons—bound states of electric charges and monopoles—condense, leading to FTI phases characterized by topological order, emergent one-form symmetries, and gapped boundary states not realizable in 2+1-D alone. Based on the lattice gauge theory, we present continuum topological quantum field theories (TQFTs) for oblique TI phases involving fluctuating one-form and two-form gauge fields. We show explicitly that these TQFTs capture both the generalized global symmetries and topological orders seen in the lattice gauge theory. We also demonstrate that these theories exhibit a universal “generalized magnetoelectric effect” in the presence of two-form background gauge fields. Moreover, we characterize the possible boundary topological orders of oblique TIs, finding a new set of boundary states not studied previously for these kinds of TQFTs.
AB - A long-standing problem in the study of topological phases of matter has been to understand the types of fractional topological insulator (FTI) phases possible in 3+1 dimensions. Unlike ordinary topological insulators of free fermions, FTI phases are characterized by fractional Θ-angles, long-range entanglement, and fractionalization. Starting from a simple family of ZN lattice gauge theories due to Cardy and Rabinovici, we develop a class of FTI phases based on the physical mechanism of oblique confinement and the modern language of generalized global symmetries. We dub these phases oblique topological insulators. Oblique TIs arise when dyons—bound states of electric charges and monopoles—condense, leading to FTI phases characterized by topological order, emergent one-form symmetries, and gapped boundary states not realizable in 2+1-D alone. Based on the lattice gauge theory, we present continuum topological quantum field theories (TQFTs) for oblique TI phases involving fluctuating one-form and two-form gauge fields. We show explicitly that these TQFTs capture both the generalized global symmetries and topological orders seen in the lattice gauge theory. We also demonstrate that these theories exhibit a universal “generalized magnetoelectric effect” in the presence of two-form background gauge fields. Moreover, we characterize the possible boundary topological orders of oblique TIs, finding a new set of boundary states not studied previously for these kinds of TQFTs.
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U2 - 10.21468/SciPostPhys.14.2.023
DO - 10.21468/SciPostPhys.14.2.023
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85152942821
SN - 2542-4653
VL - 14
JO - SciPost Physics
JF - SciPost Physics
IS - 2
M1 - 023
ER -