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Topological semimetals, such as Dirac, Weyl, or line-node semimetals, are gapless states of matter characterized by their nodal band structures and surface states. In this work, we consider layered (topologically trivial) insulating systems in $D$ dimensions that are composed of coupled multi-layers of $d$-dimensional topological semimetals. Despite being nominal bulk insulators, we show that crystal defects having co-dimension $(D-d)$ can harbor robust lower dimensional topological semimetals embedded in a trivial insulating background. As an example we show that defect-bound topological semimetals can be localized on stacking faults and partial dislocations. Finally, we propose how an embedded topological Dirac semimetal can be identified in experiment by introducing a magnetic field and resolving the relativistic massless Dirac Landau level spectrum at low energies in an otherwise gapped system.
We review the recent, mainly theoretical, progress in the study of topological nodal line semimetals in three dimensions. In these semimetals, the conduction and the valence bands cross each other along a one-dimensional curve in the three-dimensiona
Dirac and Weyl semimetals, materials where electrons behave as relativistic fermions, react to position- and time-dependent perturbations, such as strain, as if emergent electromagnetic fields were applied. Since they differ from external electromagn
When two lasers are applied to a non-centrosymmetric material, light can be generated at the difference of the incoming frequencies $Deltaomega$, a phenomenon known as difference frequency generation (DFG), well characterized in semiconductors. In th
Topological Weyl semimetals (TWS) can be classified as type-I TWS, in which the density of states vanishes at the Weyl nodes, and type-II TWS where an electron and a hole pocket meet with finite density of states at the nodal energy. The dispersions
Riemann surfaces are geometric constructions in complex analysis that may represent multi-valued holomorphic functions using multiple sheets of the complex plane. We show that the energy dispersion of surface states in topological semimetals can be r