15 research outputs found

    Frustrated Magnetic Cycloidal Structure and Emergent Potts Nematicity in CaMn2_2P2_2

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    We report neutron-diffraction results on single-crystal CaMn2_2P2_2 containing corrugated Mn honeycomb layers and determine its ground-state magnetic structure. The diffraction patterns consist of prominent (1/6, 1/6, LL) reciprocal lattice unit (r.l.u.; LL = integer) magnetic Bragg reflections, whose temperature-dependent intensities are consistent with a first-order antiferromagnetic phase transition at the N\'eel temperature TN=70(1)T_{\rm N} = 70(1) K. Our analysis of the diffraction patterns reveals an in-plane 6×66\times6 magnetic unit cell with ordered spins that in the principal-axis directions rotate by 60-degree steps between nearest neighbors on each sublattice that forms the honeycomb structure, consistent with the PAcP_Ac magnetic space group. We find that a few other magnetic subgroup symmetries (PA2/cP_A2/c, PC2/mP_C2/m, PS1ˉ,PC2,PCm,PS1P_S\bar{1}, P_C2, P_Cm, P_S1) of the paramagnetic P3ˉm11P\bar{3}m11^\prime crystal symmetry are consistent with the observed diffraction pattern. We relate our findings to frustrated J1J_1-J2J_2-J3J_3 Heisenberg honeycomb antiferromagnets with single-ion anisotropy and the emergence of Potts nematicit

    Quantum metric nonlinear Hall effect in a topological antiferromagnetic heterostructure

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    Quantum geometry - the geometry of electron Bloch wavefunctions - is central to modern condensed matter physics. Due to the quantum nature, quantum geometry has two parts, the real part quantum metric and the imaginary part Berry curvature. The studies of Berry curvature have led to countless breakthroughs, ranging from the quantum Hall effect in 2DEGs to the anomalous Hall effect (AHE) in ferromagnets. However, in contrast to Berry curvature, the quantum metric has rarely been explored. Here, we report a new nonlinear Hall effect induced by quantum metric by interfacing even-layered MnBi2Te4 (a PT-symmetric antiferromagnet (AFM)) with black phosphorus. This novel nonlinear Hall effect switches direction upon reversing the AFM spins and exhibits distinct scaling that suggests a non-dissipative nature. Like the AHE brought Berry curvature under the spotlight, our results open the door to discovering quantum metric responses. Moreover, we demonstrate that the AFM can harvest wireless electromagnetic energy via the new nonlinear Hall effect, therefore enabling intriguing applications that bridges nonlinear electronics with AFM spintronics.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figures and a Supplementary Materials with 66 pages, 4 figures and 3 tables. Originally submitted to Science on Oct. 5, 202

    Unconventional Multiband Superconductivity in Bulk SrTiO

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    Quantum dynamics simulations beyond the coherence time on NISQ hardware by variational Trotter compression

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    We demonstrate a post-quench dynamics simulation of a Heisenberg model on present-day IBM quantum hardware that extends beyond the coherence time of the device. This is achieved using a hybrid quantum-classical algorithm that propagates a state using Trotter evolution and then performs a classical optimization that effectively compresses the time-evolved state into a variational form. When iterated, this procedure enables simulations to arbitrary times with an error controlled by the compression fidelity and a fixed Trotter step size. We show how to measure the required cost function, the overlap between the time-evolved and variational states, on present-day hardware, making use of several error mitigation methods. In addition to carrying out simulations on real hardware, we investigate the performance and scaling behavior of the algorithm with noiseless and noisy classical simulations. We find the main bottleneck in going to larger system sizes to be the difficulty of carrying out the optimization of the noisy cost function.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure
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