Physical Review Research (Jan 2020)

Nonlocal annihilation of Weyl fermions in correlated systems

  • L. Crippa,
  • A. Amaricci,
  • N. Wagner,
  • G. Sangiovanni,
  • J. C. Budich,
  • M. Capone

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevResearch.2.012023
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
p. 012023

Abstract

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Weyl semimetals (WSMs) are characterized by topologically stable pairs of nodal points in the band structure that typically originate from splitting a degenerate Dirac point by breaking symmetries such as time-reversal or inversion symmetry. Within the independent-electron approximation, the transition between an insulating state and a WSM requires the local creation or annihilation of one or several pairs of Weyl nodes in reciprocal space. Here, we show that strong electron-electron interactions may qualitatively change this scenario. In particular, we reveal that the transition to a Weyl semimetallic phase can become discontinuous, and, quite remarkably, pairs of Weyl nodes with a finite distance in momentum space suddenly appear or disappear in the spectral function. We associate this behavior with the buildup of strong many-body correlations in the topologically nontrivial regions, manifesting in dynamical fluctuations in the orbital channel. We also highlight the impact of electronic correlations on the Fermi arcs.