7,269 research outputs found

    Orbital currents, anapoles, and magnetic quadrupoles in CuO

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    We show that orbital currents in a CuO2 plane, if present, should be described by two independent parity and time-reversal odd order parameters, a toroidal dipole (anapole) and a magnetic quadrupole. Based on this, we derive the resonant X-ray diffraction cross-section for monoclinic CuO at the antiferromagnetic wavevector and show that the two order parameters can be disentangled. From our analysis, we examine a recent claim of detecting anapoles in CuO.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure

    The magnetic ground state of Sr2IrO4 and implications for second-harmonic generation

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    The currently accepted magnetic ground state of Sr2IrO4 (the -++- state) preserves inversion symmetry. This is at odds, though, with recent experiments that indicate a magnetoelectric ground state, leading to the speculation that orbital currents or more exotic magnetic multipoles might exist in this material. Here, we analyze various magnetic configurations and demonstrate that two of them, the magnetoelectric -+-+ state and the non-magnetoelectric ++++ state, can explain these recent second-harmonic generation (SHG) experiments, obviating the need to invoke orbital currents. The SHG-probed magnetic order parameter has the symmetry of a parity-breaking multipole in the -+-+ state and of a parity-preserving multipole in the ++++ state. We speculate that either might have been created by the laser pump used in the experiments. An alternative is that the observed magnetic SHG signal is a surface effect. We suggest experiments that could be performed to test these various possibilities, and also address the important issue of the suppression of the RXS intensity at the L2 edge.Comment: 28 pages, 8 figures, v3 - an expanded discussion of the origin of the SHG signa

    The nature of the tensor order in Cd2Re2O7

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    The pyrochlore metal Cd2Re2O7 has been recently investigated by second-harmonic generation (SHG) reflectivity. In this paper, we develop a general formalism that allows for the identification of the relevant tensor components of the SHG from azimuthal scans. We demonstrate that the secondary order parameter identified by SHG at the structural phase transition is the x2-y2 component of the axial toroidal quadrupole. This differs from the 3z2-r2 symmetry of the atomic displacements associated with the I-4m2 crystal structure that was previously thought to be its origin. Within the same formalism, we suggest that the primary order parameter detected in the SHG experiment is the 3z2-r2 component of the magnetic quadrupole. We discuss the general mechanism driving the phase transition in our proposed framework, and suggest experiments, particularly resonant X-ray scattering ones, that could clarify this issue.Comment: some additions and clarifications adde

    X-ray Dichroism and the Pseudogap Phase of Cuprates

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    A recent polarized x-ray absorption experiment on the high temperature cuprate superconductor Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8 indicates the presence of broken parity symmetry below the temperature, T*, where a pseudogap appears in photoemission. We critically analyze the x-ray data, and conclude that a parity-breaking signal of the kind suggested is unlikely based on the crystal structures reported in the literature. Possible other origins of the observed dichroism signal are discussed. We propose x-ray scattering experiments that can be done in order to determine whether such alternative interpretations are valid or not.Comment: final version to be published in Phys Rev B: some calculational details added, clarification of XNLD contamination and biaxiality, more discussion on possible space groups and previous optics result

    On the nature of the magnetic ground-state wave function of V_2O_3

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    After a brief historical introduction, we dwell on two recent experiments in the low-temperature, monoclinic phase of V_2O_3: K-edge resonant x-ray scattering and non-reciprocal linear dichroism, whose interpretations are in conflict, as they require incompatible magnetic space groups. Such a conflict is critically reviewed, in the light of the present literature, and new experimental tests are suggested, in order to determine unambiguously the magnetic group. We then focus on the correlated, non-local nature of the ground-state wave function, that is at the basis of some drawbacks of the LDA+U approach: we singled out the physical mechanism that makes LDA+U unreliable, and indicate the way out for a possible remedy. Finally we explain, by means of a symmetry argument related to the molecular wave function, why the magnetic moment lies in the glide plane, even in the absence of any local symmetry at vanadium sites.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figur

    The implications of resonant x-ray scattering data on the physics of the insulating phase of V_2O_3

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    We have performed a quantitative analysis of recent resonant x-ray scattering experiments carried out in the antiferromagnetic phase of V_2O_3 by means of numerical ab-initio simulations. In order to treat magnetic effects, we have developed a method based on multiple scattering theory (MST) and a relativistic extension of the Schr\"{o}dinger Equation, thereby working with the usual non relativistic set of quantum numbers l,m,σl,m,\sigma for angular and spin momenta. Electric dipole-dipole (E1-E1), dipole-quadrupole (E1-E2) and quadrupole-quadrupole (E2-E2) transition were considered altogether. We obtain satisfactory agreement with experiments, both in energy and azimuthal scans. All the main features of the V K edge Bragg-forbidden reflections with h+k+l=h+k+l=odd can be interpreted in terms of the antiferromagnetic ordering only, {\it ie}, they are of magnetic origin. In particular the ab-initio simulation of the energy scan around the (1,1,1)-monoclinic reflection excludes the possibility of any symmetry reduction due to a time-reversal breaking induced by orbital ordering.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure

    Exchanges in complex networks: income and wealth distributions

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    We investigate the wealth evolution in a system of agents that exchange wealth through a disordered network in presence of an additive stochastic Gaussian noise. We show that the resulting wealth distribution is shaped by the degree distribution of the underlying network and in particular we verify that scale free networks generate distributions with power-law tails in the high-income region. Numerical simulations of wealth exchanges performed on two different kind of networks show the inner relation between the wealth distribution and the network properties and confirm the agreement with a self-consistent solution. We show that empirical data for the income distribution in Australia are qualitatively well described by our theoretical predictions.Comment: 8 pages, 11 figure
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