We study the elasticity, fluctuations and pinning of a putative spontaneous
vortex solid in ferromagnetic superconductors. Using a rigorous thermodynamic
argument, we show that in the idealized case of vanishing crystalline pinning
anisotropy the long-wavelength tilt modulus of such a vortex solid vanishes
identically, as guaranteed by the underlying rotational invariance. The
vanishing of the tilt modulus means that, to lowest order, the associated
tension elasticity is replaced by the softer, curvature elasticity. The effect
of this is to make the spontaneous vortex solid qualitatively more susceptible
to the disordering effects of thermal fluctuations and random pinning. We study
these effects, taking into account the nonlinear elasticity, that, in three
dimensions, is important at sufficiently long length scales, and showing that a
``columnar elastic glass'' phase of vortices results. This phase is controlled
by a previously unstudied zero-temperature fixed point and it is characterized
by elastic moduli that have universal strong wave-vector dependence out to
arbitrarily long length scales, leading to non-Hookean elasticity. We argue
that, although translationally disordered for weak disorder, the columnar
elastic glass is stable against the proliferation of dislocations and is
therefore a topologically ordered {\em elastic} glass. As a result, the
phenomenology of the spontaneous vortex state of isotropic magnetic
superconductors differs qualitatively from a conventional,
external-field-induced mixed state. For example, for weak external fields H,
the magnetic induction scales {\em universally} like B(H)∼B(0)+cHα, with α≈0.72.Comment: Minor editorial changes, version to be published in PRB, 39 pages, 7
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