English

Non-Hermitian bidirectional robust transport

Quantum Physics 2017-02-01 v1 Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics

Abstract

Transport of quantum or classical waves in open systems is known to be strongly affected by non-Hermitian terms that arise from an effective description of system-enviroment interaction. A simple and paradigmatic example of non-Hermitian transport, originally introduced by Hatano and Nelson two decades ago [N. Hatano and D.R. Nelson, Phys. Rev. Lett. 77, 570 (1996)], is the hopping dynamics of a quantum particle on a one-dimensional tight-binding lattice in the presence of an imaginary vectorial potential. The imaginary gauge field can prevent Anderson localization via non-Hermitian delocalization, opening up a mobility region and realizing robust transport immune to disorder and backscattering. Like for robust transport of topologically-protected edge states in quantum Hall and topological insulator systems, non-Hermitian robust transport in the Hatano- Nelson model is unidirectional. However, there is not any physical impediment to observe robust bidirectional non-Hermitian transport. Here it is shown that in a quasi-one dimensional zigzag lattice, with non-Hermitian (imaginary) hopping amplitudes and a synthetic gauge field, robust transport immune to backscattering can occur bidirectionally along the lattice.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1612.06527,
  title  = {Non-Hermitian bidirectional robust transport},
  author = {Stefano Longhi},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1612.06527},
  year   = {2017}
}

Comments

to appear in Phys. Rev. B (7 pages, 7 figures)

R2 v1 2026-06-22T17:29:08.446Z