Do you want to publish a course? Click here

Response of a strongly interacting spin-orbit coupling system to a Zeeman field

220   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 Added by Jinwu Ye
 Publication date 2020
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




Ask ChatGPT about the research

A strongly spin-orbital coupled systems could be in a magnetic ordered phase at zero field. However, a Zeeman field could drive it into different quantum or topological phases. In this work, starting from general symmetry principle, we construct various effective actions to study all these quantum phases and phase transitions which take different forms depending on the condensation momenta are commensurate or in-commensurate. We not only recover all these quantum phases and their excitations achieved by the microscopic calculations, but also discover several novel classes of quantum phase transitions with dynamic exponents $ z=1, z=2 $ and anisotropic ones $ (z_x=3/2, z_y=3) $ respectively. We determine the relations between the quantum spin and the order parameters of the effective actions which display rich spin-orbital structures. We find a new type of dangerously irrelevant operator we name type-II, in distinction from the known one we name type-I. We explore a new phenomena called order parameter fractionization where one complex order parameter split into two which is different than quantum spin fractionization into a spinon and a $ Z_2 $ flux. Finite temperature transitions are presented. The dynamic spin-spin correlation functions are evaluated. Thermal Hall conductivities are discussed. The cases with the $ U(1)_{soc} $ symmetry explicitly broken are briefly outlined. In view of recent experimental advances in generating 2d SOC for cold atoms in optical lattices, these new many-body phenomena can be explored in the near future cold atom experiments. Implications to various SOC materials such as MnSi, Fe$_{0.5}$Co$_{0.5}$Si, especially 4d Kitaev materials $alpha$-RuCl$_3$ in a Zeeman field are outlined.



rate research

Read More

The magnetic field of complete spin polarization is calculated in a disorderless single-valley strongly-interacting 2D electron system. In the metallic region above the Wigner-Mott transition, non-equilibrium spin states are predicted, which should give rise to hysteresis in the magnetization.
Most of solid-state spin physics arising from spin-orbit coupling, from fundamental phenomena to industrial applications, relies on symmetry-protected degeneracies. So does the Zeeman spin-orbit coupling, expected to manifest itself in a wide range of antiferromagnetic conductors. Yet, experimental proof of this phenomenon has been lacking. Here, we demonstrate that the Neel state of the layered organic superconductor $kappa$-(BETS)$_2$FeBr$_4$ shows no spin modulation of the Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations, contrary to its paramagnetic state. This is unambiguous evidence for the spin degeneracy of Landau levels, a direct manifestation of the Zeeman spin-orbit coupling. Likewise, we show that spin modulation is absent in electron-doped Nd$_{1.85}$Ce$_{0.15}$CuO$_4$, which evidences the presence of Neel order in this cuprate superconductor even at optimal doping. Obtained on two very different materials, our results demonstrate the generic character of the Zeeman spin-orbit coupling.
We present an experimental investigation of the dynamic spin response of a strongly interacting Fermi gas using Bragg spectroscopy. By varying the detuning of the Bragg lasers, we show that it is possible to measure the response in the spin and density channels separately. At low Bragg energies, the spin response is suppressed due to pairing, whereas the density response is enhanced. These experiments provide the first independent measurements of the spin-parallel and spin-antiparallel dynamic and static structure factors and open the way to a complete study of the structure factors at any momentum. At high momentum the spin-antiparallel dynamic structure factor displays a universal high frequency tail, proportional to $omega^{-5/2}$, where $hbar omega$ is the probe energy.
121 - A. Mokashi , S. Li , Bo Wen 2011
With decreasing density $n_s$ the thermopower $S$ of a low-disorder 2D electron system in silicon is found to exhibit a sharp increase by more than an order of magnitude, tending to a divergence at a finite, disorder-independent density $n_t$ consistent with the critical form $(-T/S) propto (n_s-n_t)^x$ with $x=1.0pm 0.1$ ($T$ is the temperature). Our results provide clear evidence for an interaction-induced transition to a new phase at low density in a strongly-interacting 2D electron system.
121 - L. Wen , Q. Sun , H. Q. Wang 2012
We systematically investigate the weakly trapped spin-1 Bose-Einstein condensates with spin-orbit coupling in an external Zeeman field. We find that the mean-field ground state favors either a magnetized standing wave phase or plane wave phase when the strength of Zeeman field is below a critical value related to the strength of spin-orbit coupling. Zeeman field can induce the phase transition between standing wave and plane wave phases, and we determine the phase boundary analytically and numerically. The magnetization of these two phases responds to the external magnetic field in a very unique manner, the linear Zeeman effect magnetizes the standing wave phase along the direction of the magnetic field, but the quadratic one demagnetizes the plane wave phase. When the strength of Zeeman field surpasses the critical value, the system is completely polarized to a ferromagnetic state or polar state with zero momentum.
comments
Fetching comments Fetching comments
Sign in to be able to follow your search criteria
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا