There are many free fermion systems that possess topological edge/boundary states. Examples include quantum Hall insulators and topological insulators. No matter chiral or non-chiral, 2D or 3D, symmetry protected or not, their microscopic origins are similar. Explicitly speaking, when placing such a system on a geometry with open boundary in one spacial dimension (say the x-axis), and closed boundary in other spacial dimensions, the bulk model Hamiltonian is always reduced to one or several copies of the following 1D Hamiltonian along the open-boundary x-axis direction (see B. Zhou et al.,PRL 101, 246807)
H1D=−i∂xσ1+k⊥σ2+(m−∂2x+k2⊥)σ3,
where σ1,2,3 are the three Pauli matrices, and k⊥ denotes the momentum perpendicular to x-axis (and could be extended to a matrix in higher dimensions). The existence of the topological edge state is equivalent to the existence of edge modes of H1D on an open chain.
It was claimed that the edge modes exist when m<0. After discretize and diagonalize H1D, I was able to check the above statement. But my question is that whether there is a simple mathematical argument that allows one to judge the existence of the edge mode by looking at the differential operator H1D without really solving it? I believe there should be a reason if the edge mode is robust.
PS: I am aware of but not satisfied with the topological argument that the bulk band has non-trivial topology, which can not be altered without closing the bulk gap, thus there must be edge states on the boundary. Is it possible to argue from the property of H1D without directly referring to the bulk topology?
This post imported from StackExchange Physics at 2014-04-05 03:32 (UCT), posted by SE-user Everett You