6 research outputs found
Ultrafast dynamics and coherent order parameter oscillations under photo-excitation in the excitonic insulator Ta2NiSe5
The excitonic insulator (EI) is an intriguing phase of condensed excitons undergoing a Bose-Einstein-Condensation (BEC)-type transition. A prominent candidate has been identified in Ta2NiSe5. Ultrafast spectroscopy allows tracing the coherent response of the EI condensate directly in the time domain. Probing the collective electronic response we can identify fingerprints for the Higgs-amplitude equivalent mode of the condensate. In addition we find a peculiar coupling of the EI phase to a low frequency phonon mode. We will discuss the transient response on multiple energies scales ranging from the exciton dynamics to the coherent THz response of the gap.Publisher PD
Fano interference of the Higgs mode in cuprate high-Tc superconductors
Despite decades of search for the pairing boson in cuprate high-Tc
superconductors, its identity still remains debated to date. For this reason,
spectroscopic signatures of electron-boson interactions in cuprates have always
been a center of attention. For example, the kinks in the quasiparticle
dispersion observed by angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES)
studies have motivated a decade-long investigation of electron-phonon as well
as electron-paramagnon interactions in cuprates. On the other hand, the overlap
between the charge-order correlations and the pseudogap in the cuprate phase
diagram has also generated discussions about the potential link between them.
In the present study, we provide a fresh perspective on these intertwined
interactions using the novel approach of Higgs spectroscopy, i.e. an
investigation of the amplitude oscillations of the superconducting order
parameter driven by a terahertz radiation. Uniquely for cuprates, we observe a
Fano interference of its dynamically driven Higgs mode with another collective
mode, which we reveal to be charge density wave fluctuations from an extensive
doping- and magnetic field-dependent study. This finding is further
corroborated by a mean field model in which we describe the microscopic
mechanism underlying the interaction between the two orders. Our work
demonstrates Higgs spectroscopy as a novel and powerful technique for
investigating intertwined orders and microscopic processes in unconventional
superconductors
Formation, compression and surface melting of colloidal clusters by active particles
We demonstrate with experiments and numerical simulations that the structure and dynamics of a suspension of passive particles is strongly altered by adding a very small (<1%) number of active particles. With increasing passive particle density, we observe first the formation of dynamic clusters comprised of passive particles being surrounded by active particles, then the merging and compression of these clusters, and eventually the local melting of crystalline regions by enclosed active particles.publishe
Formation, compression and surface melting of colloidal clusters by active particles
We demonstrate with experiments and numerical simulations that the structure and dynamics of a suspension of passive particles is strongly altered by adding a very small (<1%) number of active particles. With increasing passive particle density, we observe first the formation of dynamic clusters comprised of passive particles being surrounded by active particles, then the merging and compression of these clusters, and eventually the local melting of crystalline regions by enclosed active particles.publishe
Ultrafast dynamics and coherent order parameter oscillations under photo-excitation in the excitonic insulator Ta<sub>2</sub>NiSe<sub>5</sub>
The excitonic insulator (EI) is an intriguing phase of condensed excitons undergoing a Bose-Einstein-Condensation (BEC)-type transition. A prominent candidate has been identified in Ta2NiSe5. Ultrafast spectroscopy allows tracing the coherent response of the EI condensate directly in the time domain. Probing the collective electronic response we can identify fingerprints for the Higgs-amplitude equivalent mode of the condensate. In addition we find a peculiar coupling of the EI phase to a low frequency phonon mode. We will discuss the transient response on multiple energies scales ranging from the exciton dynamics to the coherent THz response of the gap.</p