Magnetic fluctuations and electrons couple in intriguing ways in the vicinity
of zero temperature phase transitions - quantum critical points - in conducting
materials. Quantum criticality is implicated in non-Fermi liquid behavior of
diverse materials, and in the formation of unconventional superconductors. Here
we uncover an entirely new type of quantum critical point describing the onset
of antiferromagnetism in a nodal semimetal engendered by the combination of
strong spin-orbit coupling and electron correlations, and which is predicted to
occur in the iridium oxide pyrochlores. We formulate and solve a field theory
for this quantum critical point by renormalization group techniques, show that
electrons and antiferromagnetic fluctuations are strongly coupled, and that
both these excitations are modified in an essential way. This quantum critical
point has many novel features, including strong emergent spatial anisotropy, a
vital role for Coulomb interactions, and highly unconventional critical
exponents. Our theory motivates and informs experiments on pyrochlore iridates,
and constitutes a singular realistic example of a non-trivial quantum critical
point with gapless fermions in three dimensions.Comment: 5 pages + 8 pages of Supplementary Material, 3 figures + 1
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