JOURNAL ARTICLE

Restoration of the non-Hermitian bulk-boundary correspondence via topological amplification

Abstract

Non-Hermitian (NH) lattice Hamiltonians display a unique kind of energy gap and extreme sensitivity to boundary conditions. Due to the NH skin effect, the separation between edge and bulk states is blurred and the (conventional) bulk-boundary correspondence is lost. Here, we restore the bulk-boundary correspondence for the most paradigmatic class of NH Hamiltonians, namely those with one complex band and without symmetries. We obtain the desired NH Hamiltonian from the mean-field evolution of driven-dissipative cavity arrays, in which NH terms-in the form of non-reciprocal hopping amplitudes, gain and loss-are explicitly modeled via coupling to (engineered and non-engineered) reservoirs. This approach removes the arbitrariness in the definition of the topological invariant, as point-gapped spectra differing by a complex-energy shift are not treated as equivalent; the origin of the complex plane provides a common reference (base point) for the evaluation of the topological invariant. This implies that topologically non-trivial Hamiltonians are only a strict subset of those with a point gap and that the NH skin effect does not have a topological origin. We analyze the NH Hamiltonians so obtained via the singular value decomposition, which allows to express the NH bulk-boundary correspondence in the following simple form: an integer value \nu ν of the topological invariant defined in the bulk corresponds to \vert \nu\vert | ν | singular vectors exponentially localized at the system edge under open boundary conditions, in which the sign of \nu ν determines which edge. Non-trivial topology manifests as directional amplification of a coherent input with gain exponential in system size. Our work solves an outstanding problem in the theory of NH topological phases and opens up new avenues in topological photonics.

Keywords:
Hermitian matrix Homogeneous space Hamiltonian (control theory) Physics Boundary value problem Invariant (physics) Topology (electrical circuits) Quantum mechanics Mathematics Combinatorics Geometry

Metrics

29
Cited By
6.67
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
122
Refs
0.97
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Quantum Mechanics and Non-Hermitian Physics
Physical Sciences →  Physics and Astronomy →  Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
Topological Materials and Phenomena
Physical Sciences →  Physics and Astronomy →  Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
Nonlinear Photonic Systems
Physical Sciences →  Physics and Astronomy →  Statistical and Nonlinear Physics

Related Documents

DISSERTATION

Bulk-boundary correspondence in non-Hermitian point-gap topological phases

Nakamura, Daichi

University:   Kyoto University Research Information Repository (Kyoto University) Year: 2024
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Why does bulk boundary correspondence fail in some non-hermitian topological models

Ye Xiong

Journal:   Journal of Physics Communications Year: 2018 Vol: 2 (3)Pages: 035043-035043
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.