4.6 Article

Chiral gauge field and axial anomaly in a Weyl semimetal

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW B
Volume 87, Issue 23, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.87.235306

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Tsinghua Education Foundation North America
  2. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Microsystems Technology Office, MesoDynamic Architecture Program (MESO) [N66001-11-1-4105]
  3. Government of Canada through Industry Canada
  4. Province of Ontario through the Ministry of Research and Innovation
  5. National Science Foundation [NSF PHY11-25915]

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Weyl fermions are two-component chiral fermions in (3 + 1) dimensions. When coupled to a gauge field, the Weyl fermion is known to have an axial anomaly, which means the current conservation of the left-handed and right-handed Weyl fermions cannot be preserved separately. Recently, Weyl fermions have been proposed in condensed-matter systems named Weyl semimetals. In this paper we propose a Weyl semimetal phase in magnetically doped topological insulators, and study the axial anomaly in this system. We propose that the magnetic fluctuation in this system plays the role of a chiral gauge field which minimally couples to the Weyl fermions with opposite charges for two chiralities. We study the anomaly equation of this system and discuss its physical consequences, including one-dimensional chiral modes in a ferromagnetic vortex line, and a novel plasmon-magnon coupling.

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