236 research outputs found
Stripe order, depinning, and fluctuations in LaBaCuO and LaBaSrCuO
We present a neutron scattering study of stripe correlations measured on a
single crystal of LaBaCuO. Within the
low-temperature-tetragonal (LTT) phase, superlattice peaks indicative of spin
and charge stripe order are observed below 50 K. For excitation energies
meV, we have characterized the magnetic excitations that
emerge from the incommensurate magnetic superlattice peaks. In the ordered
state, these excitations are similar to spin waves. Following these excitations
as a function of temperature, we find that there is relatively little change in
the {\bf Q}-integrated dynamical spin susceptibility for
meV as stripe order disappears and then as the structure transforms from LTT to
the low-temperature-orthorhombic (LTO) phase. The {\bf Q}-integrated signal at
lower energies changes more dramatically through these transitions, as it must
in a transformation from an ordered to a disordered state. We argue that the
continuous evolution through the transitions provides direct evidence that the
incommensurate spin excitations in the disordered state are an indicator of
dynamical charge stripes. An interesting feature of the thermal evolution is a
variation in the incommensurability of the magnetic scattering. Similar
behavior is observed in measurements on a single crystal of
LaBaSrCuO; maps of the scattered intensity
in a region centered on the antiferromagnetic wave vector and measured at
meV are well reproduced by a model of disordered stripes with a
temperature-dependent mixture of stripe spacings. We discuss the relevance of
our results to understanding the magnetic excitations in cuprate
superconductors.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, 1 tabl
Magnetic field effects and magnetic anisotropy in lightly doped La_{2-x}Sr_xCuO_4
The effects of the application of a magnetic field on the diagonal stripe
spin-glass phase is studied in lightly doped La_{2-x}Sr_xCuO_4 (x=0.014 and
0.024). With increasing magnetic field, the magnetic elastic intensity at the
diagonal incommensurate (DIC) positions (1,\pm\epsilon,0) decreases as opposed
to the increase seen in superconducting samples. This diminution in intensity
with increasing magnetic field originates from a spin reorientation transition,
which is driven by the antisymmetric exchange term in the spin Hamiltonian. On
the other hand, the transition temperature, the incommensurability, and the
peak width of the diagonal incommensurate correlations are not changed with
magnetic field. This result suggests that the magnetic correlations are
determined primarily by the charge disproportionation and that the geometry of
the diagonal incommensurate magnetism is also determined by effects, that is,
stripe formation which are not purely magnetic in origin. The
Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya antisymmetric exchange is nevertheless important in
determining the local spin structure in the DIC stripe phase.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Translational Symmetry Breaking in the Superconducting State of the Cuprates: Analysis of the Quasiparticle Density of States
Motivated by the recent STM experiments of J.E. Hoffman et.al. and C. Howald
et.al., we study the effects of weak translational symmetry breaking on the
quasiparticle spectrum of a d-wave superconductor. We develop a general
formalism to discuss periodic charge order, as well as quasiparticle scattering
off localized defects. We argue that the STM experiments in
cannot be explained using a simple charge density
wave order parameter, but are consistent with the presence of a periodic
modulation in the electron hopping or pairing amplitude. We review the effects
of randomness and pinning of the charge order and compare it to the impurity
scattering of quasiparticles. We also discuss implications of weak
translational symmetry breaking for ARPES experiments.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figs; (v2) minor corrections to formalism, discussions of
dispersion, structure factors and sum rules added; (v3) discussion of
space-dependent normalization added. To be published in PR
Quantum Spin Systems: From Spin Gaps to Pseudo Gaps
Many low dimensional spin systems with a dimerized or ladder-like
antiferromagnetic exchange coupling have a gapped excitation spectrum with
magnetic bound states within the spin gap. For spin ladders with an even number
of legs the existence of spin gaps and within the t-J model a tendency toward
superconductivity with d-wave symmetry is predicted. In the following we will
characterize the spin excitation spectra of different low dimensional spin
systems taking into account strong spin phonon interaction (),
charge ordering () and doping on chains and ladders (\ladder).
The spectroscopic characterization of the model systems mentioned above has
been performed using magnetic inelastic light scattering originating from a
spin conserving exchange scattering mechanism. This is also bound to yield more
insight into the interrelation between these spin gap excitations and the
origin of the pseudo gap in high temperature superconductors.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Effect of a magnetic field on long-range magnetic order in stage-4 and stage-6 superconducting La2CuO(4+y)
We have measured the enhancement of the static incommensurate spin-density
wave (SDW) order by an applied magnetic field in stage-4 and stage-6 samples of
superconducting La2CuO(4+y). We show that the stage-6 La2CuO(4+y) (Tc=32 K)
forms static long-range SDW order with the same wave-vector as that in the
previously studied stage-4 material. We have measured the field dependence of
the SDW magnetic Bragg peaks in both stage-4 and stage-6 materials at fields up
to 14.5 T. A recent model of competing SDW order and superconductivity
describes these data well.Comment: Published version. 6 pages. 1 figure adde
Universality class of S=1/2 quantum spin ladder system with the four spin exchange
We study s=1/2 Heisenberg spin ladder with the four spin exchange. Combining
numerical results with the conformal field theory(CFT), we find a phase
transition with central charge c=3/2. Since this system has an SU(2) symmetry,
we can conclude that this critical theory is described by k=2 SU(2)
Wess-Zumino-Witten model with Z symmetry breaking
Thermodynamic properties of excess-oxygen-doped La2CuO4.11 near a simultaneous transition to superconductivity and long-range magnetic order
We have measured the specific heat and magnetization {\it versus} temperature
in a single crystal sample of superconducting LaCuO and in a
sample of the same material after removing the excess oxygen, in magnetic
fields up to 15 T. Using the deoxygenated sample to subtract the phonon
contribution, we find a broad peak in the specific heat, centered at 50 K. This
excess specific heat is attributed to fluctuations of the Cu spins possibly
enhanced by an interplay with the charge degrees of freedom, and appears to be
independent of magnetic field, up to 15 T. Near the superconducting transition
(=0)= 43 K, we find a sharp feature that is strongly suppressed when
the magnetic field is applied parallel to the crystallographic c-axis. A model
for 3D vortex fluctuations is used to scale magnetization measured at several
magnetic fields. When the magnetic field is applied perpendicular to the
c-axis, the only observed effect is a slight shift in the superconducting
transition temperature.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
Competing orders in a magnetic field: spin and charge order in the cuprate superconductors
We describe two-dimensional quantum spin fluctuations in a superconducting
Abrikosov flux lattice induced by a magnetic field applied to a doped Mott
insulator. Complete numerical solutions of a self-consistent large N theory
provide detailed information on the phase diagram and on the spatial structure
of the dynamic spin spectrum. Our results apply to phases with and without
long-range spin density wave order and to the magnetic quantum critical point
separating these phases. We discuss the relationship of our results to a number
of recent neutron scattering measurements on the cuprate superconductors in the
presence of an applied field. We compute the pinning of static charge order by
the vortex cores in the `spin gap' phase where the spin order remains
dynamically fluctuating, and argue that these results apply to recent scanning
tunnelling microscopy (STM) measurements. We show that with a single typical
set of values for the coupling constants, our model describes the field
dependence of the elastic neutron scattering intensities, the absence of
satellite Bragg peaks associated with the vortex lattice in existing neutron
scattering observations, and the spatial extent of charge order in STM
observations. We mention implications of our theory for NMR experiments. We
also present a theoretical discussion of more exotic states that can be built
out of the spin and charge order parameters, including spin nematics and phases
with `exciton fractionalization'.Comment: 36 pages, 33 figures; for a popular introduction, see
http://onsager.physics.yale.edu/superflow.html; (v2) Added reference to new
work of Chen and Ting; (v3) reorganized presentation for improved clarity,
and added new appendix on microscopic origin; (v4) final published version
with minor change
Order and quantum phase transitions in the cuprate superconductors
It is now widely accepted that the cuprate superconductors are characterized
by the same long-range order as that present in the Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer
(BCS) theory: that associated with the condensation of Cooper pairs. We argue
that many physical properties of the cuprates require interplay with additional
order parameters associated with a proximate Mott insulator. We review a
classification of Mott insulators in two dimensions, and contend that the
experimental evidence so far shows that the class appropriate to the cuprates
has collinear spin correlations, bond order, and confinement of neutral, spin
S=1/2 excitations. Proximity to second-order quantum phase transitions
associated with these orders, and with the pairing order of BCS, has led to
systematic predictions for many physical properties. We use this context to
review the results of recent neutron scattering, fluxoid detection, nuclear
magnetic resonance, and scanning tunnelling microscopy experiments.Comment: 20 pages, 13 figures, non-technical review article; some technical
details in the companion review cond-mat/0211027; (v3) added refs; (v4)
numerous improvements thanks to the referees, to appear in Reviews of Modern
Physics; (v6) final version as publishe
Magnetic neutron scattering in hole doped cuprate superconductors
A review is presented of the static and dynamic magnetic properties of
hole-doped cuprate superconductors measured with neutron scattering. A wide
variety of experiments are described with emphasis on the monolayer
La_{2-x}(Sr,Ba)_{x}CuO_{4} and bilayer YBa_{2}Cu_{3}O_{6+x} cuprates. At zero
hole doping, both classes of materials are antiferromagnetic insulators with
large superexchange constants of J > 100 meV. For increasing hole doping, the
cuprates become superconducting at a critical hole concentration of
x_{c}=0.055. The development of new instrumentation at neutron beam sources
coupled with the improvement in materials has lead to a better understanding of
these materials and the underlying spin dynamics over a broad range of hole
dopings. We will describe how the spin dispersion changes across the insulating
to superconducting boundary as well as the static magnetic properties which are
directly coupled with the superconductivity. Experiments directly probing the
competing magnetic and superconducting order parameters involving magnetic
fields, impurity doping, and structural order will be examined. Correlations
between superconductivity and magnetism will also be discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 18 figures. To be published in Journal of the Physical
Society of Japa
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