50,919 research outputs found
A parity-breaking electronic nematic phase transition in the spin-orbit coupled metal CdReO
Strong electron interactions can drive metallic systems toward a variety of
well-known symmetry-broken phases, but the instabilities of correlated metals
with strong spin-orbit coupling have only recently begun to be explored. We
uncovered a multipolar nematic phase of matter in the metallic pyrochlore
CdReO using spatially resolved second-harmonic optical anisotropy
measurements. Like previously discovered electronic nematic phases, this
multipolar phase spontaneously breaks rotational symmetry while preserving
translational invariance. However, it has the distinguishing property of being
odd under spatial inversion, which is allowed only in the presence of
spin-orbit coupling. By examining the critical behavior of the multipolar
nematic order parameter, we show that it drives the thermal phase transition
near 200 kelvin in CdReO and induces a parity-breaking lattice
distortion as a secondary order.Comment: 9 pages main text, 4 figures, 10 pages supplementary informatio
Far-infrared optical properties of the pyrochlore spin ice compound Dy2Ti2O4
Near normal incident far-infrared reflectivity spectra of [111] dysprosium
titanate (Dy2Ti2O4) single crystal have been measured at different
temperatures. Seven phonon modes (eight at low temperature) are identified at
frequency below 1000 cm-1. Optical conductivity spectra are obtained by fitting
all the reflectivity spectra with the factorized form of the dielectric
function. Both the Born effective charges and the static optical primitivity
are found to increase with decreasing temperature. Moreover, phonon linewidth
narrowering and phonon modes shift with decreasing temperature are also
observed, which may result from enhanced charge localization. The redshift of
several low frequency modes is attributed to the spin-phonon coupling. All
observed optical properties can be explained within the framework of nearest
neighbor ferromagnetic(FM) spin ice model
The mechanism of the polarization dependence of the optical transmission in subwavelength metal hole arrays
We investigate the mechanism of extraordinary optical transmission in
subwave-length metal hole arrays. Experimental results for the arrays
consisting of square or rectangle holes are well explained about the dependence
of transmission strength on the polarization direction of the incident light.
This polarization dependence occurs in each single-hole. For a hole array,
there is in addition an interplay between the adjacent holes which is caused by
the transverse magnetic field of surface plasmon polariton on the metal film
surfaces. Based on the detailed study of a single-hole and two-hole structures,
a simple method to calculate the total tranmissivity of hole arrays is
proposed.Comment: 34 pages, 7 figure
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