In a ferromagnet, an applied electric field E invariably produces an
anomalous Hall current JH that flows perpendicular to the plane
defined by E and M (the magnetization). For decades, the question
whether JH is dissipationless (independent of the scattering rate),
has been keenly debated without experimental resolution. In the ferromagnetic
spinel CuCr2Se4−xBrx, the resistivity ρ (at low temperature)
may be increased 1000 fold by varying x(Br), without degrading the M.
We show that JH/E (normalized per carrier, at 5 K) remains unchanged
throughout. In addition to resolving the controversy experimentally, our
finding has strong bearing on the generation and study of spin-Hall currents in
bulk samples.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure