Topological insulators avoid the parity anomaly

Michael Mulligan and F. J. Burnell
Phys. Rev. B 88, 085104 – Published 5 August 2013

Abstract

The surface of a 3+1d-topological insulator hosts an odd number of gapless Dirac fermions when charge conjugation and time-reversal symmetries are preserved. Viewed as a purely 2+1d system, this surface theory would necessarily explicitly break parity and time-reversal when coupled to a fluctuating gauge field. Here, we explain why such a state can exist on the boundary of a 3+1d system without breaking these symmetries, even if the number of boundary components is odd. This is accomplished from two complementary perspectives: topological quantization conditions and regularization. We first discuss the conditions under which (continuous) large gauge transformations may exist when the theory lives on a boundary of a higher-dimensional space-time. Next, we show how the higher-dimensional bulk theory is essential in providing a parity-invariant regularization of the theory living on the lower-dimensional boundary or defect.

  • Figure
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  • Received 4 June 2013

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.88.085104

©2013 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Michael Mulligan1 and F. J. Burnell2,3

  • 1Station Q, Microsoft Research, Santa Barbara, California 93106-6105, USA
  • 2Theoretical Physics, Oxford University, 1 Keble Road, Oxford OX1 3NP, United Kingdom
  • 3All Souls College, Oxford OX1 4AL, United Kingdom

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Issue

Vol. 88, Iss. 8 — 15 August 2013

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