- Gatti, G;
- Gosálbez-Martínez, D;
- Tsirkin, SS;
- Fanciulli, M;
- Puppin, M;
- Polishchuk, S;
- Moser, S;
- Testa, L;
- Martino, E;
- Roth, S;
- Bugnon, Ph;
- Moreschini, L;
- Bostwick, A;
- Jozwiak, C;
- Rotenberg, E;
- Di Santo, G;
- Petaccia, L;
- Vobornik, I;
- Fujii, J;
- Wong, J;
- Jariwala, D;
- Atwater, HA;
- Rønnow, HM;
- Chergui, M;
- Yazyev, OV;
- Grioni, M;
- Crepaldi, A
Trigonal tellurium, a small-gap semiconductor with pronounced magneto-electric and magneto-optical responses, is among the simplest realizations of a chiral crystal. We have studied by spin- and angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy its unconventional electronic structure and unique spin texture. We identify Kramers-Weyl, composite, and accordionlike Weyl fermions, so far only predicted by theory, and show that the spin polarization is parallel to the wave vector along the lines in k space connecting high-symmetry points. Our results clarify the symmetries that enforce such spin texture in a chiral crystal, thus bringing new insight in the formation of a spin vectorial field more complex than the previously proposed hedgehog configuration. Our findings thus pave the way to a classification scheme for these exotic spin textures and their search in chiral crystals.