Magnetoelectric effect of a conducting sphere near a planar topological insulator (1910.10292v1)
Abstract: When time-reversal symmetry is broken on its surface, topological insulators exhibit a magnetoelectric response which is described by axion electrodynamics. A direct consequence of this theory is the appearance of a magnetic field that resembles the one produced by a magnetic image monopole when a point-like electric charge is located near the surface of the material. In this paper we investigate the more realistic problem when the point-like charge is replaced by a finite size sphere at constant potential. We calculate the electromagnetic fields using the potential formulation in a particular bispherical coordinate system. We find that the electromagnetic fields can be interpreted in terms of point electric and image magnetic charges as if the medium were the vacuum. As a manifestation of the magnetoelectric effect, we highlight the resulting magnetic field, which we analyze in detail along the symmetry axis, since such estimates could be useful in evaluating the experimental possibility of its measurement via sensible magnetometers. Our numerical estimates show that the proposed setup provides a magnetic field strength in the range of 10-100 mG, which is attainable with present day sensitivities in NV center-diamond magnetometers, for example.
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