Berry connection and curvature explained
In physics, Berry connection and Berry curvature are related concepts which can be viewed, respectively, as a local gauge potential and gauge field associated with the Berry phase or geometric phase. The concept was first introduced by S. Pancharatnam[1] as geometric phase and later elaborately explained and popularized by Michael Berry in a paper published in 1984[2] emphasizing how geometric phases provide a powerful unifying concept in several branches of classical and quantum physics.
Berry phase and cyclic adiabatic evolution
depends on a (vector) parameter
that varies with time
. If the
'th
eigenvalue
remains non-degenerate everywhere along the path and the variation with time
t is sufficiently slow, then a system initially in the normalized eigenstate
will remain in an instantaneous eigenstate
of the Hamiltonian
, up to a phase, throughout the process. Regarding the phase, the state at time
t can be written as
[3] where the second exponential term is the "dynamic phase factor." The first exponential term is the geometric term, with
being the Berry phase. From the requirement that the state
satisfies the time-dependent Schrödinger equation, it can be shown that
indicating that the Berry phase only depends on the path in the parameter space, not on the rate at which the path is traversed.
In the case of a cyclic evolution around a closed path
such that
, the closed-path Berry phase is
An example of physical systems where an electron moves along a closed path is cyclotron motion (details are given in the page of
Berry phase). Berry phase must be considered to obtain the correct quantization condition.
Gauge transformation
A gauge transformation can be performedto a new set of states that differ from the original ones only by an
-dependent phase factor. This modifies the open-path Berry phase to be
\tilde\gamman(t)=\gamman(t)+\beta(t)-\beta(0)
. For a closed path, continuity requires that
(
an integer), and it follows that
is invariant, modulo
, under an arbitrary gauge transformation.
Berry connection
The closed-path Berry phase defined above can be expressed aswhere is a vector-valued function known as the Berry connection (or Berry potential). The Berry connection is gauge-dependent, transforming as
\tilde{l{A}}n(R)=l{A}n(R)+\nablaR\beta(R)
. Hence the local Berry connection
can never be physically observable. However, its integral along a closed path, the Berry phase
, is gauge-invariant up to an integer multiple of
. Thus,
is absolutely gauge-invariant, and may be related to physical observables.
Berry curvature
The Berry curvature is an anti-symmetric second-rank tensor derived from the Berry connection viaIn a three-dimensional parameter space the Berry curvature can be written in the pseudovector formThe tensor and pseudovector forms of the Berry curvature are related to each other through the Levi-Civita antisymmetric tensor as
\Omegan,\mu\nu=\epsilon\mu\nu\xi\Omegan,\xi
. In contrast to the Berry connection, which is physical only after integrating around a closed path, the Berry curvature is a gauge-invariant local manifestation of the geometric properties of the wavefunctions in the parameter space, and has proven to be an essential physical ingredient for understanding a variety of electronic properties.
[4] [5] For a closed path
that forms the boundary of a surface
, the closed-path Berry phase can be rewritten using
Stokes' theorem as
If the surface is a closed manifold, the boundary term vanishes, but the indeterminacy of the boundary term modulo
manifests itself in the
Chern theorem, which states that the integral of the Berry curvature over a closed manifold is quantized in units of
. This number is the so-called
Chern number, and is essential for understanding various quantization effects.
Finally, by using
\left\langlen|\partialH/\partialR|n'\right\rangle=\left\langle\partialn/\partialR|n'\right\rangle(\varepsilonn-\varepsilonn')
for
, the Berry curvature can also be written as a summation over all the other eigenstates in the form
Note that the curvature of the nth energy level is contributed by all the other energy levels. That is, the Berry curvature canbe viewed as the result of the residual interaction ofthose projected-out eigenstates.
[5] This gives the local conservation law for the Berrycurvature,
\sumn\Omegan,\mu\nu(R)=0,
if we sum over all possible energy levels for each value of
This equation also offers the advantage that no differentiation on the eigenstates is involved, and thus it can becomputed under any gauge choice.
Example: Spinor in a magnetic field
The Hamiltonian of a spin-1/2 particle in a magnetic field can be written as[3] where
denote the
Pauli matrices,
is the
magnetic moment, and
B is the magnetic field. In three dimensions, the eigenstates have energies
and their eigenvectors are
Now consider the
state. Its Berry connection can be computed as
l{A}\phi=\langleu-|i\tfrac{1}{r\sin{\theta}}\partial\phi|u-\rangle=
}, and the Berry curvature is
}[\partial_\theta(\mathcal{A}_\phi\sin{\theta})-\partial_\phi\mathcal{A}_\theta]\hat=\frac\hat.If we choose a new gauge by multiplying
by
(or any other phase
,
), the Berry connections are
and
}, while the Berry curvature remains the same. This is consistent with the conclusion that the Berry connection is gauge-dependent while the Berry curvature is not.
The Berry curvature per solid angle is given by
\overline{\Omega}\theta\phi=\Omega\theta\phi/\sin\theta=1/2
. In this case, the Berry phase corresponding to any given path on the unit sphere
in magnetic-field space is just half the solid angle subtended by the path.The integral of the Berry curvature over the whole sphere is therefore exactly
, so that the Chern number is unity, consistent with the Chern theorem.
Applications in crystals
The Berry phase plays an important role in modern investigations of electronic properties in crystalline solids[5] and in the theory of the quantum Hall effect.[6] The periodicity of the crystalline potential allows the application of the Bloch theorem, which states that the Hamiltonian eigenstates take the formwhere
is a band index,
is a wavevector in the reciprocal-space (
Brillouin zone), and
is a periodic function of
. Due to translational symmetry, the momentum operator
could be replaced with
by the Peierls substitution and the wavevector
plays the role of the parameter
.
[5] Thus, one can define Berry phases, connections, and curvatures in the reciprocal space. For example, in anN-band system, the Berry connection of the nth band in reciprocal space is
In the system, the Berry curvature of the nth band
is given by all the other N − 1 bands for each value of
In a 2D crystal, the Berry curvature only hasthe component out of the plane and behaves as a pseudoscalar. It is because there only exists in-plane translational symmetry when translational symmetry is broken along z direction for a 2D crystal. Because the Bloch theorem also implies that the reciprocal space itself is closed, with the Brillouin zone having the topology of a 3-torus in three dimensions, the requirements of integrating over a closed loop or manifold can easily be satisfied. In this way, such properties as the
electric polarization, orbital
magnetization, anomalous Hall conductivity, and orbital magnetoelectric coupling can be expressed in terms of Berry phases, connections, and curvatures.
[5] [7] [8] External links
Notes and References
- Pancharatnam . S. . Generalized theory of interference, and its application . Proc. Indian Acad. Sci. . November 1956 . 44 . 5 . 247–262 . 10.1007/BF03046050. 118184376 .
- Berry, M. V.. Quantal Phase Factors Accompanying Adiabatic Changes. 392. 1802. 45–57. 1984. 10.1098/rspa.1984.0023. Proceedings of the Royal Society A. 1984RSPSA.392...45B . 46623507.
- Book: Sakurai, J.J.. Modern Quantum Mechanics. 2005. Addison–Wesley. Revised Edition.
- Manifestations of Berry's phase in molecules and in condensed matter . Resta, Raffaele . 55261008 . J. Phys.: Condens. Matter . 12 . 9 . R107–R143 . 2000 . 10.1088/0953-8984/12/9/201. 2000JPCM...12R.107R .
- Berry phase effects on electronic properties . Xiao, Di . Chang, Ming-Che . Niu, Qian . Rev. Mod. Phys. . 82 . 3 . 1959–2007 . Jul 2010 . 10.1103/RevModPhys.82.1959 . 2010RvMP...82.1959X. 0907.2021 . 17595734 .
- Quantized Hall Conductance in a Two-Dimensional Periodic Potential . Thouless, D. J. . Kohmoto, M. . Nightingale, M. P. . den Nijs, M. . Phys. Rev. Lett. . 49 . 6 . 405–408 . Aug 1982 . 10.1103/PhysRevLett.49.405 . American Physical Society. 1982PhRvL..49..405T. free .
- Chang, Ming-Che . Niu, Qian . Berry curvature, orbital moment, and effective quantum theory of electrons in electromagnetic fields . Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter . 20 . 19 . 193202 . 2008 . 10.1088/0953-8984/20/19/193202. 2008JPCM...20s3202C . 35936765 .
- Electrical polarization and orbital magnetization: the modern theories . Resta, Raffaele . 18645988 . J. Phys.: Condens. Matter . 22 . 12 . 123201 . 2010 . 10.1088/0953-8984/22/12/123201. 21389484 . 2010JPCM...22l3201R .