Do you want to publish a course? Click here

Manifestion of structural Higgs and Goldstone modes in the hexagonal manganites

101   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 Added by Quintin Meier
 Publication date 2019
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




Ask ChatGPT about the research

Structural phase transitions described by Mexican hat potentials should in principle exhibit aspects of Higgs and Goldstone physics. Here, we investigate the relationship between the phonons that soften at such structural phase transitions and the Higgs- and Goldstone-boson analogues associated with the crystallographic Mexican hat potential. We show that, with the exception of systems containing only one atom type, the usual Higgs and Goldstone modes are represented by a combination of several phonon modes, with the lowest energy phonons of the relevant symmetry having substantial contribution. Taking the hexagonal manganites as a model system, we identify these modes using Landau theory, and predict the temperature dependence of their frequencies using parameters obtained from density functional theory. Separately, we calculate the additional temperature dependence of all phonon mode frequencies arising from thermal expansion within the quasi-harmonic approximation. We predict that Higgs-mode softening will dominate the low-frequency vibrational spectrum of InMnO$_3$ between zero kelvin and room-temperature, whereas the behavior of ErMnO$_3$ will be dominated by lattice expansion effects. We present temperature-dependent Raman scattering data that support our predictions, in particular confirming the existence of the Higgs mode in InMnO$_3$.



rate research

Read More

We study the low-energy excitations of the Bose-Hubbard model in the strongly-interacting superfluid phase using a Gutzwiller approach and extract the single-particle and single-hole excitation amplitudes for each mode. We report emergent mode-dependent particle-hole symmetry on specific arc-shaped lines in the phase diagram connecting the well-known Lorentz-invariant limits of the Bose-Hubbard model. By tracking the in-phase particle-hole symmetric oscillations of the order parameter, we provide an answer to the long-standing question about the fate of the pure amplitude Higgs mode away from the integer-density critical point. Furthermore, we point out that out-of-phase oscillations are responsible for a full suppression of the condensate density oscillations of the gapless Goldstone mode. Possible detection protocols are also discussed.
The lattice dynamics of the $rm YMnO_3$ magneto-electric compound has been investigated using density functional calculations, both in the ferroelectric and the paraelectric phases. The coherence between the computed and experimental data is very good in the low temperature phase. Using group theory, modes continuity and our calculations we were able to show that the phonons modes observed by Raman scattering at 1200K are only compatible with the ferroelectric $P6_{3} cm$ space group, thus supporting the idea of a ferroelectric to paraelectric phase transition at higher temperature. Finally we proposed a candidate for the phonon part of the observed electro-magnon. This mode, inactive both in Raman scattering and in Infra-Red, was shown to strongly couple to the Mn-Mn magnetic interactions.
55 - F. Yang , M. W. Wu 2018
We show that the gauge-invariant kinetic equation of superconductivity provides an efficient approach to study the electromagnetic response of the gapless Nambu-Goldstone and gapful Higgs modes on an equal footing. We prove that the Fock energy in the kinetic equation is equivalent to the generalized Wards identity. Hence, the gauge invariance directly leads to the charge conservation. Both linear and second-order responses are investigated. The linear response of the Higgs mode vanishes in the long-wave limit. Whereas the linear response of the Nambu-Goldstone mode interacts with the long-range Coulomb interaction, causing the original gapless spectrum lifted up to the plasma frequency as a result of the Anderson-Higgs mechanism, in consistency with the previous works. The second-order response exhibits interesting physics. On one hand, a finite second-order response of the Higgs mode is obtained in the long-wave limit. We reveal that this response, which has been experimentally observed, is attributed solely to the drive effect rather than the widely considered Anderson-pump effect. On the other hand, the second-order response of the Nambu-Goldstone mode, free from the influence of the long-range Coulomb interaction and hence the Anderson-Higgs mechanism, is predicted. We find that both Anderson-pump and drive effects play important role in this response. A tentative scheme to detect this second-order response is proposed.
Using first-principles calculations we examine the band structures of ferromagnetic hexagonal manganites $mathrm{YXO_3}$ (X=V, Cr, Mn, Fe and Co) in the nonpolar nonsymmorphic $P6_3/mmc$ space group. For $mathrm{YVO_3}$ and $mathrm{YCrO_3}$ we find a band inversion near the Fermi energy that generates a nodal ring in the $k_z=0$ mirror plane. We perform a more detailed analysis for these compounds and predict the existence of the topological drumhead surface states. Finally, we briefly discuss the low-symmetry polar phases (space group $P6_3cm$) of these systems, and show they can undergo a $P6_3/mmc rightarrow P6_3cm$ transition by condensation of soft $K_3$ and $Gamma_2^-$ phonons. Based on our findings, stabilizing these compounds in the hexagonal phase could offer a promising platform for studying the interplay of topology and multiferroicity, and the coexistence of real-space and reciprocal-space topological protection in the same phase.
An incommensurate phase refers to a solid state in which the period of a superstructure is incommensurable with the primitive unit cell. Recently the incommensurate phase is induced by applying an in-plane strain to hexagonal manganites, which demonstrates single chiral modulation of six domain variants. Here we employ Landau theory in combination with the phase-field method to investigate the incommensurate phase in hexagonal manganites. It is shown that the equilibrium wave length of the incommensurate phase is determined by temperature and the magnitude of the applied strain, and a temperature-strain phase diagram is constructed for the stability of the incommensurate phase. Temporal evolution of domain structures reveals that the applied strain not only produces the force pulling the vortices and anti-vortices in opposite directions, but also results in the creation and annihilation of vortex-antivortex pairs.
comments
Fetching comments Fetching comments
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا