Thermal equilibration on the edges of topological liquids

ORAL

Abstract

Thermal conductance has emerged as a powerful probe of topological order in the quantum Hall effect and beyond. The interpretation of experiments depends on the ratio of the sample size and the equilibration length, on which energy exchange among contra-propagating chiral modes becomes significant. We show that at low temperatures the equilibration length diverges as 1/T^2 for almost all Abelian and non-Abelian topological orders. A faster 1/T^4 divergence is present on the edges of the non-Abelian PH-Pfaffian and negative-flux Read-Rezayi liquids. We address experimental consequences of the 1/T^2 and 1/T^4 laws in a sample, shorter than the equilibration length.

1. K. K. W Ma and D. E. Feldman, Phys. Rev. Lett. 125, 016801 (2020)

*This research was supported in part by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. DMR-1902356

Presenters

  • Dmitri Feldman

    • Department of Physics, Brown University
    • Brown University
    • Physics, Brown University

Authors

  • Kwok Wai Ma

    • National High Magnetic Field Laboratory
  • Dmitri Feldman

    • Department of Physics, Brown University
    • Brown University
    • Physics, Brown University