177,801 research outputs found
Collective spin resonance excitation in the gapped itinerant multipole hidden order phase of URu2Si2
An attractive proposal for the hidden order (HO) in the heavy electron
compound URu2Si2 is an itinerant multipole order of high rank. It is due to the
pairing of electrons and holes centered on zone center and boundary,
respectively in states that have maximally different total angular momentum
components. Due to the pairing with commensurate zone boundary ordering vector
the translational symmetry is broken and a HO quasiparticle gap opens below the
transition temperature T_HO. Inelastic neutron scattering (INS) has
demonstrated that for T<T_HO the collective magnetic response is dominated by a
sharp spin exciton resonance at the ordering vector Q that is reminiscent of
spin exciton modes found inside the gap of unconventional superconductors and
Kondo insulators. We use an effective two-orbital tight binding model
incorporating the crystalline electric field effect to derive closed
expressions for quasiparticle bands reconstructed by the multipolar pairing
terms. We show that the magnetic response calculated within that model exhibits
the salient features of the resonance found in INS. We also use the calculated
dynamical susceptibility to explain the low temperature NMR relaxation rate.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figure
Hidden Order Behaviour in URu2Si2 (A Critical Review of the Status of Hidden Order in 2014)
Throughout the past three decades the hidden order (HO) problem in
URuSi has remained a "hot topic" in the physics of strongly correlated
electron systems with well over 600 publications related to this subject.
Presently in 2014 there has been significant progress in combining various
experimental results embedded within electronic structure calculations using
density functional theory (DFT) to give a consistent description of the
itinerant behaviour of the HO transition and its low temperature state. Here we
review six different experiments: ARPES, quantum oscillations, neutron
scattering, RXD, optical spectroscopy and STM/STS. We then establish the
consistencies among these experiments when viewed through the Fermi-surface
nesting, folding and gapping framework as predicted by DFT. We also discuss a
group of other experiments (torque, cyclotron resonance, NMR and XRD) that are
more controversial and are presently in a "transition" state regarding their
interpretation as rotational symmetry breaking and dotriacontapole formation.
There are also a series of recent "exotic" experiments (Raman scattering, polar
Kerr effect and ultrasonics) that require verification, yet they offer new
insights into the HO symmetry breaking and order parameter. We conclude with
some constraining comments on the microscopic models that rely on localised
-U states and strong Ising anisotropy {for explaining} the HO transition,
and with an examination of different models in the light of recent experiments.Comment: 21 pages, 12 figures; to appear in Phil. Ma
Peierls instability, periodic Bose-Einstein condensates and density waves in quasi-one-dimensional boson-fermion mixtures of atomic gases
We study the quasi-one-dimensional (Q1D) spin-polarized bose-fermi mixture of
atomic gases at zero temperature. Bosonic excitation spectra are calculated in
random phase approximation on the ground state with the uniform BEC, and the
Peierls instabilities are shown to appear in bosonic collective excitation
modes with wave-number by the coupling between the Bogoliubov-phonon
mode of bosonic atoms and the fermion particle-hole excitations. The
ground-state properties are calculated in the variational method, and,
corresponding to the Peierls instability, the state with a periodic BEC and
fermionic density waves with the period are shown to have a lower
energy than the uniform one. We also briefly discuss the Q1D system confined in
a harmonic oscillator (HO) potential and derive the Peierls instability
condition for it.Comment: 9 pages, 3figure
Dynamical charge inhomogeneity and crystal-field fluctuations for 4f ions in high-Tc cuprates
The main relaxation mechanism of crystal-field excitations in rare-earth ions
in cuprates is believed to be provided by the fluctuations of crystalline
electric field induced by a dynamic charge inhomogeneity generic for the doped
cuprates. We address the generalized granular model as one of the model
scenario for such an ingomogeneity where the cuprate charge subsystem remind
that of Wigner crystal with the melting transition and phonon-like positional
excitation modes. Formal description of R-ion relaxation coincides with that of
recently suggested magnetoelastic mechanism.Comment: 4 page
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