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Probing chiral edge dynamics and bulk topology of a synthetic Hall system

Quantum Hall systems are characterized by quantization of the Hall conductance—a bulk property rooted in the topological structure of the underlying quantum states 1 . In condensed matter devices, material imperfections hinder a direct connection to simple topological models 2 , 3 . Artificial syste...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Nature physics 2020-10, Vol.16 (10), p.1017-1021
Main Authors: Chalopin, Thomas, Satoor, Tanish, Evrard, Alexandre, Makhalov, Vasiliy, Dalibard, Jean, Lopes, Raphael, Nascimbene, Sylvain
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Quantum Hall systems are characterized by quantization of the Hall conductance—a bulk property rooted in the topological structure of the underlying quantum states 1 . In condensed matter devices, material imperfections hinder a direct connection to simple topological models 2 , 3 . Artificial systems, such as photonic platforms 4 or cold atomic gases 5 , open novel possibilities by enabling specific probes of topology 6 – 13 or flexible manipulation, for example using synthetic dimensions 14 – 21 . However, the relevance of topological properties requires the notion of a bulk, which was missing in previous works using synthetic dimensions of limited sizes. Here, we realize a quantum Hall system using ultracold dysprosium atoms in a two-dimensional geometry formed by one spatial dimension and one synthetic dimension encoded in the atomic spin J  = 8. We demonstrate that the large number of magnetic sublevels leads to distinct bulk and edge behaviours. Furthermore, we measure the Hall drift and reconstruct the local Chern marker, an observable that has remained, so far, experimentally inaccessible 22 . In the centre of the synthetic dimension—a bulk of 11 states out of 17—the Chern marker reaches 98(5)% of the quantized value expected for a topological system. Our findings pave the way towards the realization of topological many-body phases. The quantum Hall effect is realized in a two-dimensional quantum gas system consisting of one spatial dimension and one synthetic dimension encoded in the atomic spin. Measurements show distinct bulk properties rooted in the topological structure.
ISSN:1745-2473
1745-2481
1476-4636
DOI:10.1038/s41567-020-0942-5