MgCr2βO4β is one of the best-known realizations of the
pyrochlore-lattice Heisenberg antiferromagnet. The strong antiferromagnetic
exchange interactions are perturbed by small further-neighbor exchanges such
that this compound may in principle realize a spiral spin liquid (SSL) phase in
the zero-temperature limit. However, a spin Jahn-Teller transition below
TNββ13 K yields a complicated long-range magnetic order with
multiple coexisting propagation vectors. We present neutron scattering and
thermo-magnetic measurements of MgCr2βO4β samples under applied
hydrostatic pressure up to P=1.7 GPa demonstrating the existence of multiple
close-lying nearly degenerate magnetic ground states. We show that the
application of hydrostatic pressure increases the ordering temperature by
around 0.8 K per GPa and increases the bandwidth of the magnetic excitations by
around 0.5 meV per GPa. We also evidence a strong tendency for the preferential
occupation of a subset of magnetic domains under pressure. In particular, we
show that the k=(0,0,1) magnetic phase, which is almost
negligible at ambient pressure, dramatically increases in spectral weight under
pressure. This modifies the spectrum of magnetic excitations, which we
interpret unambiguously as spin waves from multiple magnetic domains. Moreover,
we report that the application of pressure reveals a feature in the magnetic
susceptibility above the magnetostructural transition. We interpret this as the
onset of a short-range ordered phase associated with k=(0,0,1),
previously not observed in magnetometry measurements.Comment: 19 pages including supplementary information, 10 main figures 6
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