Key Points

Scientists from the Raman Research Institute have discovered a new method to detect hidden properties in quantum materials using a property known as the spectral function. This breakthrough allows researchers to observe the topological invariants of materials, key to advancements in quantum computing and efficient energy systems. Traditionally, techniques like ARPES were used, but this new method reveals deeper insights into a material’s structure without direct observation. Led by Professor Dibyendu Roy and Kiran Babasaheb Estake, this study offers a universal tool for exploring and classifying topological materials, potentially transforming future technological applications.

Key Points: Scientists Unveil New Method for Detecting Exotic Quantum Materials

  • New method detects topological invariants in quantum materials
  • Raman Research Institute leads breakthrough with spectral function analysis
  • Advances potential quantum computing, electronics, energy-efficient systems
3 min read

New code for detecting hidden properties of exotic materials

A breakthrough method detects hidden properties in quantum materials, paving the way for advances in technology.

"We have demonstrated… that the spectral function contains signatures about the topology. - Kiran Babasaheb Estake"

New Delhi, May 26

Scientists have found a new way of spotting a property of topological space called topological invariant in quantum materials, that remains unchanged under continuous deformations or transformations, Ministry of Science & Technology said in an official statement on Monday.

New Delhi [India], May 26 (ANI): Scientists have found a new way of spotting a property of topological space called topological invariant in quantum materials, that remains unchanged under continuous deformations or transformations, Ministry of Science & Technology said in an official statement on Monday.

Topological materials are at the forefront of next-gen technology--quantum computing, fault-tolerant electronics, and energy-efficient systems. But detecting their exotic properties has always been tricky. Topological invariance implies that if you can deform one shape into another without cutting or gluing, any topological invariant will be the same for both shapes. A popular analogy is the wada (or a donut) and a coffee cup. Since both the wada and the coffee cup have one hole, they are topologically equivalent. On the other hand, a wada and an idli are not, since you cannot continuously deform one into another as they have different numbers of holes. This idea of counting holes is key to understanding the hidden properties of exotic materials, it added.

In certain materials like topological insulators and superconductors, strange things happen. Electrons behave differently depending on how the material is "shaped" at the quantum level. These shapes are defined not by their appearance, but by something deeper--topological invariants, such as winding numbers (in 1D systems) and Chern numbers (in 2D systems). These numbers are like hidden codes that determine how particles move through a material, the release added.

A team from the Raman Research Institute, an autonomous institute of the Department of Science and Technology, found a new way to detect this hidden code using a property called the spectral function. This is something like a quantum fingerprint that reveals how energy and particles behave inside the material. Professor Dibyendu Roy and PhD researcher Kiran Babasaheb Estake have carried this out by analyzing the momentum-space spectral function (SPSF).

Traditionally, scientists used techniques like ARPES (Angle-Resolved Photoemission Spectroscopy) to study electron behaviour. The new research published in Physical Review B showed that the same spectral function holds clues to the material's hidden topology--a revolutionary way to "see" the structure without directly observing it.

"The spectral function has been used since many years as an experimental tool to probe the physical quantities such as density of states and the dispersion relation of electrons in a system through ARPES. It was not seen as a tool to probe topology or topological aspects of an electronic system." said Kiran Babasaheb Estake, PhD student in theoretical Physics at RRI and the lead author.

"We have demonstrated through various examples that the spectral function also contains signatures about the topology of a system," he added.

The study potentially offers a universal tool to explore and classify topological materials, that could pave the way for new discoveries in condensed matter physics that could be useful for quantum computers, next generation electronics, and facilitate energy-efficiency.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya M.
Amazing breakthrough by Indian scientists! 🇮🇳 The wada-idli analogy made this complex topic so relatable for common people like me. Hope this research helps India lead in quantum computing race. More funding should go to such fundamental research.
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Arjun K.
As an engineering student, this is fascinating! But I wish the article explained more about practical applications. How soon can we see this being used in actual quantum devices? The spectral function approach sounds promising though.
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Sanjana R.
Kudos to Prof. Roy and team! 👏 But why don't we hear more about such groundbreaking work from Indian institutes? Our media focuses too much on politics and cricket. Science deserves equal coverage, especially when it's world-class research like this.
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Rahul D.
The coffee cup-wada comparison is brilliant! 😄 Shows how Indian scientists can explain complex physics using everyday examples. Hope this leads to more 'Make in India' quantum tech rather than just importing foreign technology.
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Neha P.
While this is impressive, I worry about brain drain. Will our talented researchers get proper support and recognition here? Many such innovations end up benefiting foreign countries because we don't have proper infrastructure to implement them.
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Vikram S.
This is why we need to invest more in fundamental sciences! While everyone talks about apps and startups, real technological revolutions come from such deep physics research. Proud moment for Raman Research Institute and Indian science community.

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