Electronic charges introduced in copper-oxide planes generate high-transition
temperature superconductivity but, under special circumstances, they can also
order into filaments called stripes. Whether an underlying tendency of charges
to order is present in all cuprates and whether this has any relationship with
superconductivity are, however, two highly controversial issues. In order to
uncover underlying electronic orders, magnetic fields strong enough to
destabilise superconductivity can be used. Such experiments, including quantum
oscillations in YBa2Cu3Oy (a notoriously clean cuprate where charge order is
not observed) have suggested that superconductivity competes with spin, rather
than charge, order. Here, using nuclear magnetic resonance, we demonstrate that
high magnetic fields actually induce charge order, without spin order, in the
CuO2 planes of YBa2Cu3Oy. The observed static, unidirectional, modulation of
the charge density breaks translational symmetry, thus explaining quantum
oscillation results, and we argue that it is most likely the same 4a-periodic
modulation as in stripe-ordered cuprates. The discovery that it develops only
when superconductivity fades away and near the same 1/8th hole doping as in
La2-xBaxCuO4 suggests that charge order, although visibly pinned by CuO chains
in YBa2Cu3Oy, is an intrinsic propensity of the superconducting planes of high
Tc cuprates.Comment: For a final version, see
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v477/n7363/full/nature10345.htm