Optical conductivity of an interacting Weyl liquid in the collisionless regime
ORAL
Abstract
Optical conductivity can serve as an indispensable probe of correlation effects in a wide range of materials, from high-Tc superconductors, heavy fermion systems, Fe-based superconductors to graphene, as well as Weyl and Dirac semimetals. As we will show, the long range Coulomb interaction yields a universal enhancement of the zero-temperature optical conductivity that depends solely on the number of Weyl points at the Fermi level [1]. To this end, we use dimensional regularization about three spatial dimensions, since this regularization scheme explicitly preserves gauge invariance. The scaling of optical conductivity is a remarkable consequence of an interplay between the quantum-critical nature of an interacting Weyl liquid, marginal irrelevance of the long-range Coulomb interaction and the violation of hyperscaling in three spatial dimensions. Experimental consequences of this effect in recently discovered Weyl and Dirac materials will be outlined.
[1] B. Roy and V. Juricic, Phys. Rev. B 96, 155117 (2017).
[1] B. Roy and V. Juricic, Phys. Rev. B 96, 155117 (2017).
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Presenters
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Vladimir Juricic
- Stockholm University
- Nordita, the Nordic Institute for Theoretical Physics, Stockholm University and KTH
- Stockholm University, Nordita