Topological charge pumping in the interacting bosonic Rice-Mele model

ORAL

Abstract

In recent years, demonstrations of topological Thouless charge pumping have been performed with ultra-cold atoms. We discuss our recent work [1] investigating charge pumping in the Bosonic Rice-Mele model and verify that the charge pumping remains quantized as long as the pump cycle avoids the superfluid phase. In the limit of hardcore bosons, the quantized pumped charge can be understood from single-particle properties such as the integrated Berry curvature constructed from Bloch states, while this picture breaks down at finite interaction strengths. These two properties -- robust quantized charge transport in an interacting system of bosons and the breakdown of a single-particle invariant -- could both be measured with ultracold quantum gases extending a previous experiment [2]. We also relate the structure of the spectral flow of the entanglement spectrum to the properties of the charge pump.

[1] A.L.C. Hayward et al., arXiv:1810.07043 (2018)
[2] M. Lohse et al., Nature Phys. 12, 350 (2016)

*Supported by the DFG - project number 277974659 via Research Unit FOR 2414. Additional support from the DFG - project number 282603579 (DIP), the European Commission (UQUAM Grant No. 5319278), the Nanosystems Initiative Munich Grant No. EXC4, and the NSF, Grant No. NSF PHY-1748958.

Presenters

  • Andrew Hayward

    • Institute for Theoretical Physics, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen

Authors

  • Andrew Hayward

    • Institute for Theoretical Physics, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen
  • Christian Schweizer

    • Fakultät für Physik, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
  • Michael Lohse

    • Fakultät für Physik, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
  • Monika Aidelsburger

    • Fakultät für Physik, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
    • Fakultät für Physik, Universität München
  • Fabian Heidrich-Meisner

    • Institute for Theoretical Physics, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen
    • Institute for Theoretical Physics, Universität Göttingen