Acoustic Landau quantization and quantum-Hall-like edge states

arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics(2019)

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Abstract
Many intriguing phenomena occur for electrons under strong magnetic fields 1 , 2 . Recently, it was shown that an appropriate strain texture in graphene could induce a synthetic gauge field 3 – 6 , in which electrons behave as they do in a real magnetic field 7 – 11 . This enabled the control of quantum transport by mechanical means and allowed the unreached high-field regime to be explored. Such synthetic gauge fields have been achieved in molecular 12 and photonic 13 lattices. Here we report an experimental realization of a giant uniform pseudomagnetic field in acoustics by introducing a simple uniaxial deformation to the acoustic graphene. The controllability of our macroscopic platform enables us to observe the acoustic Landau levels in frequency-resolved spectroscopy and their spatial localization in pressure-field distributions. We further visualize the quantum-Hall-like edge states (connected to the zeroth Landau level), which have been elusive owing to the difficulty in creating large-area uniform pseudomagnetic fields 5 , 6 . These results, consistent with our full-wave simulations, establish a complete framework for artificial structures under constant pseudomagnetic fields. Our findings may also offer opportunities to manipulate sound in conceptually novel ways.
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Key words
Quantum Hall,Topological insulators,Physics,general,Theoretical,Mathematical and Computational Physics,Classical and Continuum Physics,Atomic,Molecular,Optical and Plasma Physics,Condensed Matter Physics,Complex Systems
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