- Deng, Ke;
- Wan, Guoliang;
- Deng, Peng;
- Zhang, Kenan;
- Ding, Shijie;
- Wang, Eryin;
- Yan, Mingzhe;
- Huang, Huaqing;
- Zhang, Hongyun;
- Xu, Zhilin;
- Denlinger, Jonathan;
- Fedorov, Alexei;
- Yang, Haitao;
- Duan, Wenhui;
- Yao, Hong;
- Wu, Yang;
- Fan, Shoushan;
- Zhang, Haijun;
- Chen, Xi;
- Zhou, Shuyun
Weyl semimetal is a new quantum state of matter hosting the condensed matter physics counterpart of the relativistic Weyl fermions originally introduced in high-energy physics. The Weyl semimetal phase realized in the TaAs class of materials features multiple Fermi arcs arising from topological surface states and exhibits novel quantum phenomena, such as a chiral anomaly-induced negative magnetoresistance and possibly emergent supersymmetry. Recently it was proposed theoretically that a new type (type-II) of Weyl fermion that arises due to the breaking of Lorentz invariance, which does not have a counterpart in high-energy physics, can emerge as topologically protected touching between electron and hole pockets. Here, we report direct experimental evidence of topological Fermi arcs in the predicted type-II Weyl semimetal MoTe 2 (refs 23-25). The topological surface states are confirmed by directly observing the surface states using bulk- and surface-sensitive angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, and the quasi-particle interference pattern between the putative topological Fermi arcs in scanning tunnelling microscopy. By establishing MoTe 2 as an experimental realization of a type-II Weyl semimetal, our work opens up opportunities for probing the physical properties of this exciting new state.