Universal edge information from wave-function deformation

Abstract

It is well known that the bulk physics of a topological phase constrains its possible edge physics through the bulk-edge correspondence. Therefore, the different types of edge theories that a topological phase can host constitute a universal piece of data which can be used to characterize topological order. In this paper, we argue that, beginning from only the fixed-point wave function (FPW) of a nonchiral topological phase and by locally deforming it, all possible edge theories can be extracted from its entanglement Hamiltonian (EH). We give a general argument, and concretely illustrate our claim by deforming the FPW of the Wen-plaquette model, the quantum double of Z2. In that case, we show that the possible EHs of the deformed FPW reflect the known possible types of edge theories, which are generically gapped, but gapless if translational symmetry is preserved. We stress that our results do not require an underlying Hamiltonian--thus, this lends support to the notion that a topological phase is indeed characterized by only a set of quantum states and can be studied through its FPWs.

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