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Without the constraint imposed by Hermiticity, non-Hermitian systems enjoy greater freedom than Hermitian ones. While the non-Hermitian ramification of non-spatial (internal) symmetries has been revealed, spatial symmetries remain to be explored. Here, we identify intrinsically non-Hermitian spatial symmetries using the same reasoning as non-spatial symmetry ramification. The symmetry endows exceptional topological semimetals with global topological structures, by preserving exceptional points but altering their topological invariants nonlocally. Furthermore, the global band configuration in the bulk is strongly constrained by non-Hermitian spatial symmetry, due to the intertwining of left and right eigen-systems at symmetry-related locations in momentum space. We illustrate our theory using two novel topological phases: exceptional unconventional Weyl semimetals and exceptional triple-point semimetals, in which the global structures of exceptional points, exceptional lines, and higher-order exceptional points are stabilized by one or more non-Hermitian spatial symmetries. We propose a cold-atom experiment to realize the exceptional unconventional Weyl semimetals.
We study a new class of non-Hermitian topological phases in three dimension in the absence of any symmetry, where the topological robust band degeneracies are Hopf-link exceptional lines. As a concrete example, we investigate the non-Hermitian band s
We consider a 3-dimensional (3D) non-Hermitian exceptional line semimetal model and take open boundary conditions in x, y, and z directions separately. In each case, we calculate the parameter regions where the bulk-boundary correspondence is broken.
In this article we study 3D non-Hermitian higher-order Dirac semimetals (NHHODSMs). Our focus is on $C_4$-symmetric non-Hermitian systems where we investigate inversion ($mathcal{I}$) or time-reversal ($mathcal{T}$) symmetric models of NHHODSMs havin
We study non-Hermitian higher-order Weyl semimetals (NHHOWSMs) possessing real spectra and having inversion $mathcal{I}$ ($mathcal{I}$-NHHOWSM) or time-reversal symmetry $mathcal{T}$ ($mathcal{T}$-NHHOWSM). When the reality of bulk spectra is lost, t
Classifications of symmetry-protected topological (SPT) phases provide a framework to systematically understand the physical properties and potential applications of topological systems. While such classifications have been widely explored in the con