A new experimental approach for the exploration of topological quantum phenomena : Topological Insulators and Superconductors


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The three-dimensional topological insulator (originally called topological insulators) is the first example in nature of a topologically ordered electronic phase existing in three dimensions that cannot be reduced to multiple copies of quantum-Hall-like states. Their topological order can be realized at room temperatures without magnetic fields and they can be turned into magnets and exotic superconductors leading to world-wide interest and activity in topological insulators. One of the major challenges in going from quantum Hall-like 2D states to 3D topological insulators is to develop new experimental approaches/methods to precisely probe this novel form of topological-order since the standard tools and settings that work for IQH-state also work for QSH states. The method to probe 2D topological-order is exclusively with charge transport, which either measures quantized transverse conductance plateaus in IQH systems or longitudinal conductance in quantum spin Hall (QSH) systems. In a 3D topological insulator, the boundary itself supports a two dimensional electron gas (2DEG) and transport is not (Z$_2$) topologically quantized. In this paper, we review the birth of momentum- and spin-resolved spectroscopy as a new experimental approach and as a directly boundary sensitive method to study and prove topological-order in three-dimensions via the direct measurements of the topological invariants {$ u_o$} that are associated with the Z$_2$ topology of the spin-orbit band structure and opposite parity band

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