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Topology shared between classical metamaterials and interacting superconductors

Supersymmetry has been studied at a linear level between normal modes of metamaterials described by rigidity matrices and non-interacting quantum Hamiltonians. The connection between classical and quantum was made through the matrices involved in each problem. Recently, insight into the behavior of nonlinear mechanical systems was found by defining topological indices via the Poincaré-Hopf index. It turns out, because of the mathematical similarity, this topological index shows a way to approach supersymmetric quantum theory from classical mechanics. Using this mathematical similarity, we establish a topological connection between isostatic mechanical metamaterials and supersymmetric quantum systems, such as electrons coupled to phonons in metals and superconductors. Firstly, we define $Q_{net}$ for an isostatic mechanical system that counts the minimum number of zero-energy configurations. Secondly, we write a supersymmetric Hamiltonian that describes a metal or a superconductor interacting with anharmonic phonons. This Hamiltonian has a Witten index, a topological invariant that captures the balance of bosonic and fermionic zero-energy states. We are able to connect these two systems by showing that $Q_{net}=W$ under very general conditions. Our result shows that (1) classical metamaterials can be used to study the topology of interacting quantum systems with aid of supersymmetry, and (2) with fine-tuning between anharmonicity of phonons and couplings among Majorana fermions and phonons, it is possible to realize such a supersymmetric quantum system that shares the same topology as classical mechanical systems.

preprint2022arXivOpen access
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