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Published October 2020 | Published + Submitted
Journal Article Open

Topological defect networks for fractons of all types

Abstract

Fracton phases exhibit striking behavior which appears to render them beyond the standard topological quantum field theory (TQFT) paradigm for classifying gapped quantum matter. Here, we explore fracton phases from the perspective of defect TQFTs and show that topological defect networks—networks of topological defects embedded in stratified 3+1-dimensional (3+1D) TQFTs—provide a unified framework for describing various types of gapped fracton phases. In this picture, the subdimensional excitations characteristic of fractonic matter are a consequence of mobility restrictions imposed by the defect network. We conjecture that all gapped phases, including fracton phases, admit a topological defect network description and support this claim by explicitly providing such a construction for many well-known fracton models, including the X-cube and Haah's B code. To highlight the generality of our framework, we also provide a defect network construction of a fracton phase hosting non-Abelian fractons. As a byproduct of this construction, we obtain a generalized membrane-net description for fractonic ground states as well as an argument that our conjecture implies no topological fracton phases exist in 2+1-dimensional gapped systems. Our paper also sheds light on techniques for constructing higher-order gapped boundaries of 3+1D TQFTs.

Additional Information

© 2020 Published by the American Physical Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the published article's title, journal citation, and DOI. Received 1 May 2020; revised 29 August 2020; accepted 15 September 2020; published 30 October 2020. It is a pleasure to thank Maissam Barkeshli, Dominic Else, Jeongwan Haah, Michael Hermele, Sheng-Jie Huang, Zhu-Xi Luo, Wilbur Shirley, and Zhenghan Wang for stimulating discussions and correspondence. This paper was initiated and performed in part at the Aspen Center for Physics, which is supported by National Science Foundation Grant No. PHY-1607611. D.A. is supported by A postdoctoral fellowship from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, under the Emergent Phenomena in Quantum Systems (EPiQS) initiative, Grant No. GBMF4304. D.B. is supported by Joint Quantum Institute Physics Frontier Center at University of Maryland (JQI-PFC-UMD). A.P. acknowledges support through a Princeton Center for Theoretical Science (PCTS) fellowship at Princeton University. K.S. is supported by the Walter Burke Institute for Theoretical Physics at California Institute of Technology. D.W. acknowledges support from the Simons Foundation.

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Published - PhysRevResearch.2.043165.pdf

Submitted - 2002.05166.pdf

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August 19, 2023
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