hokhani
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Do any band structure (in absence of any external field) in general, is symmetric with respect to k? In other words, do we always have E(k)=E(-k).
Your statement is not true in general.Henryk said:Energy is a quadratic function of k.
By this statement do you mean that to have E(k)=E(-k), both "time reversal and inversion symmetry" are necessary or one of them suffices?radium said:In regards to your statement, it is true if you have time reversal and inversion symmetries.
##(\psi _k(r) = e^{ikr} \phi_k (r))^*=e^{-ikr}\phi_k^*(r) ##. This only equals ##\psi_{-k}(r)## if ##\phi_k^*=\phi_{-k}##. The other point is that in the presence of spin orbit interaction or magnetic fields, U may not be real because the spin matrix ##\sigma_y## is imaginary.Henryk said:Suppose, we have a Bloch wavefunction ##\psi _k(r) = e^{ikr} \phi (r) ## corresponding to energy E.
Now, we can simply take a complex conjugate of the above equation !
The complex conjugate of ## \psi _k(r) ## is ## \psi _{-k}(r) ##,
Of course, but we already said that E(k)=E(-k) may fail to hold if there is no inversion symmetry.hokhani said:I think at systems with inversion symmetry, an electron moving towards one direction see the same environment as the electron moving in the opposite direction. Therefore it seems E(k)=E(-k) to be held regardless of whether the time reversal exists or not.