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Chiral gauge field in light-driven Dirac electrons in Co<sub>3</sub>Sn<sub>2</sub>S<sub>2</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

Floquet engineering has been proposed as an intriguing approach to control topological materials such as Dirac semimetals and Weyl semimetals using light. It was proposed based on Floquet theory that a chiral gauge field can be implemented to Dirac electrons by a circularly polarized periodic driving field, and the transition from Dirac semimetal to Weyl semimetal can be achieved. We experimentally found that Co3Sn2S2 in the paramagnetic phase, which is a 3D Dirac electron system, exhibited an instantaneous anomalous Hall effect when irradiated with a mid-infrared circularly polarized light pulse. We quantitatively compared the intensity and frequency dependences of the observed anomalous Hall conductivity with the effective model describing the Floquet state of Co3Sn2S2, suggesting that the nonzero Berry curvature due to light-induced chiral gauge field causes the anomalous Hall effect. Our demonstration paves a new pathway for ultrafast manipulation of topological phases of matter and for further exploring various topological phases achievable only by light.

Publication: N. Yoshikawa et al., arXiv:2209.11932

Presenters

  • Naotaka Yoshikawa

    The University of Tokyo

Authors

  • Naotaka Yoshikawa

    The University of Tokyo

  • Yoshua Hirai

    The University of Tokyo

  • Kazuma Ogawa

    The University of Tokyo

  • Shun Okumura

    The University of Tokyo, Univ. of Tokyo, Univ of Tokyo

  • Kohei Fujiwara

    Tohoku University

  • Junya Ikeda

    Tohoku University

  • Takashi Koretsune

    Tohoku University

  • Ryotaro Arita

    The University of Tokyo, Univ of Tokyo, Univ of Tokyo, RIKEN CEMS, University of Tokyo, the University of Tokyo

  • Aditi Mitra

    NYU

  • Atsushi Tsukazaki

    Tohoku University, Institute for Materials Research, Tohoku University

  • Takashi Oka

    The University of Tokyo, Univ. of Tokyo, Institute for solid state physics, The University of Tokyo, Institute for Solid State Physics, University of Tokyo, University of Tokyo

  • Ryo Shimano

    The University of Tokyo, Cryogenic Research Center and Department of Physics, The University of Tokyo