Composite fermi liquids in the lowest Landau level
Abstract
We study composite fermi liquid (CFL) states in the lowest Landau level (LLL) limit at a generic filling = 1n. We begin with the old observation that, in compressible states, the composite fermion in the lowest Landau level should be viewed as a charge-neutral particle carrying vorticity. This leads to the absence of a Chern-Simons term in the effective theory of the CFL. We argue here that instead a Berry curvature should be enclosed by the fermi surface of composite fermions, with the total Berry phase fixed by the filling fraction φB=-2π. We illustrate this point with the CFL of fermions at filling fractions =1/2q and (single and two-component) bosons at =1/(2q+1). The Berry phase leads to sharp consequences in the transport properties including thermal and spin Hall conductances, which in the RPA approximation are distinct from the standard Halperin-Lee-Read predictions. We emphasize that these results only rely on the LLL limit, and do not require particle-hole symmetry, which is present microscopically only for fermions at =1/2. Nevertheless, we show that the existing LLL theory of the composite fermi liquid for bosons at =1 does have an emergent particle-hole symmetry. We interpret this particle-hole symmetry as a transformation between the empty state at =0 and the boson integer quantum hall state at =2. This understanding enables us to define particle-hole conjugates of various bosonic quantum Hall states which we illustrate with the bosonic Jain and Pfaffian states. The bosonic particle-hole symmetry can be realized exactly on the surface of a three-dimensional boson topological insulator. We also show that with the particle-hole and spin SU(2) rotation symmetries, there is no gapped topological phase for bosons at =1.
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