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Long-range interactions can fundamentally alter properties in gapped topological phases such as emergent massive edge modes. However, recent research has shifted attention to topological nontrivial critical points or phases, and it is natural to explore how long-range interactions influence them. In this work, we investigate the topological behavior at the quantum critical point of extended Kitaev chains with long-range interactions, which can be derived from the critical Ising model via the Jordan-Wigner transformation in the short-range limit. Specifically, we analytically find that the critical edge modes at the critical point remain stable against long-range interactions. More importantly, we observe that these critical edge modes remain massless even when long- range interactions become very strong. As a by-product, we numerically find that the critical behavior of the long-range model belongs to the free-Majorana-fermion universality class, which is entirely different from the long-range universality class in the usual long-range spin models. Our work could shed new light on the interplay between long-range interactions (frustrated) and the gapless topological phases of matter.
Zhong et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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