Beyond the Berry Phase: Extrinsic Geometry of Quantum States
Abstract: Consider a set of quantum states $| \psi(x) \rangle$ parameterized by $x$ taken from some parameter space $M$. We demonstrate how all geometric properties of this manifold of states are fully described by a scalar gauge-invariant Bargmann invariant $P{(3)}(x_1, x_2, x_3)=\operatorname{tr}[P(x_1) P(x_2)P(x_3)]$, where $P(x) = |\psi(x)\rangle \langle\psi(x)|$. Mathematically, $P(x)$ defines a map from $M$ to the complex projective space $\mathbb{C}Pn$ and this map is uniquely determined by $P{(3)}(x_1,x_2,x_3)$ up to a symmetry transformation. The phase $\arg P{(3)}(x_1,x_2,x_3)$ can be used to compute the Berry phase for any closed loop in $M$, however, as we prove, it contains other information that cannot be determined from any Berry phase. When the arguments $x_i$ of $P{(3)}(x_1,x_2,x_3)$ are taken close to each other, to the leading order, it reduces to the familiar Berry curvature $\omega$ and quantum metric $g$. We show that higher orders in this expansion are functionally independent of $\omega$ and $g$ and are related to the extrinsic properties of the map of $M$ into $\mathbb{C}Pn$ giving rise to new local gauge-invariant objects, such as the fully symmetric 3-tensor $T$. Finally, we show how our results have immediate applications to the modern theory of polarization, calculation of electrical response to a modulated field and physics of flat bands.
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