Event
Department Colloquium: "Topological Boundary Modes from Quantum Electronics to Classical Mechanics"
Professor Charles Kane (Univ of Penn)
Over the past several years, our understanding of topological electronic
phases of matter has advanced dramatically. A paradigm that has
emerged is that insulating electronic states with an energy gap fall
into distinct topological classes. Interfaces between different
topological phases exhibit gapless conducting states that are protected
topologically and are impossible to get rid of. In this talk we will
discuss the application of this idea to the quantum Hall effect,
topological insulators, topological superconductors and the quest for
Majorana fermions in condensed matter. We will then show that similar
ideas arise in a completely different class of problems. Isostatic
lattices are arrays of masses and springs that are at the verge of
mechanical instability. They play an important role in our
understanding of granular matter, glasses and other 'soft' systems. Depending on their geometry, they can exhibit zero-frequency 'floppy'
modes localized on their boundaries that are insensitive to local
perturbations. The mathematical relation between this classical system
and quantum electronic systems reveals an unexpected connection between
theories of hard and soft matter.