Projects per year
Abstract
The type-II Weyl and type-II Dirac points emerge in semimetals and also in relativistic systems. In particular, the type-II Weyl fermions may emerge behind the event horizon of black holes. In this case the horizon with Painlevé–Gullstrand metric serves as the surface of the Lifshitz transition. This relativistic analogy allows us to simulate the black hole horizon and Hawking radiation using the fermionic superfluid with supercritical velocity, and the Dirac and Weyl semimetals with the interface separating the type-I and type-II states. The difference between such type of the artificial event horizon and that which arises in acoustic metric is discussed. At the Lifshitz transition between type-I and type-II fermions the Dirac lines may also emerge, which are supported by the combined action of topology and symmetry. The type-II Weyl and Dirac points also emerge as the intermediate states of the topological Lifshitz transitions. Different configurations of the Fermi surfaces, involved in such Lifshitz transition, are discussed. In one case the type-II Weyl point connects the Fermi pockets and the Lifshitz transition corresponds to the transfer of the Berry flux between the Fermi pockets. In the other case the type-II Weyl point connects the outer and inner Fermi surfaces. At the Lifshitz transition the Weyl point is released from both Fermi surfaces. They loose their Berry flux, which guarantees the global stability, and without the topological support the inner surface disappears after shrinking to a point at the second Lifshitz transition. These examples reveal the complexity and universality of topological Lifshitz transitions, which originate from the ubiquitous interplay of a variety of topological characters of the momentum-space manifolds. For the interacting electrons, the Lifshitz transitions may lead to the formation of the dispersionless (flat) band with zero energy and singular density of states, which opens the route to room-temperature superconductivity. Originally, the idea of the enhancement of Tc due to flat band has been put forward by the nuclear physics community, and this also demonstrates the close connections between different areas of physics.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 276-299 |
Number of pages | 24 |
Journal | Journal of Low Temperature Physics |
Volume | 189 |
Issue number | 5-6 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Dec 2017 |
MoE publication type | A1 Journal article-refereed |
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Dive into the research topics of 'Lifshitz Transitions, Type-II Dirac and Weyl Fermions, Event Horizon and All That'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 2 Finished
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TOPVAC: From Topological Matter to Relativistic Quantum Vacuum
Volovik, G. (Principal investigator), Nissinen, J. (Project Member), Eltsov, V. (Project Member), Rysti, J. (Project Member), Rantanen, R. (Project Member), Mäkinen, J. (Project Member), Zhang, K. (Project Member), Volard, M.-M. (Project Member), Kamppinen, T. (Project Member) & Ikäheimo, A. (Project Member)
01/10/2016 → 30/09/2022
Project: EU: ERC grants
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Centre of Excellence in Low Temperature Quantum Phenomena and Devices
Eltsov, V. (Principal investigator), Hietala, N. (Project Member), Rysti, J. (Project Member), Mäkinen, J. (Project Member) & Volovik, G. (Project Member)
01/01/2015 → 31/12/2017
Project: Academy of Finland: Other research funding