ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Recent scattering experiments in the 3D Kitaev magnet $beta$-Li$_2$IrO$_3$ have shown that a relatively weak magnetic field along the crystallographic ${bf b}$-axis drives the system from its incommensurate counter-rotating order to a correlated paramagnet, with a significant uniform `zigzag component superimposing the magnetization along the field. Here it is shown that the zigzag order is not emerging from its linear coupling to the field (via a staggered, off-diagonal element of the ${bf g}$-tensor), but from its intertwining with the incommensurate order and the longitudinal magnetization. The emerging picture explains all qualitative experimental findings at zero and finite fields, including the rapid decline of the incommensurate order with field and the so-called intensity sum rule. The latter are shown to be independent signatures of the smallness of the Heisenberg exchange $J$, compared to the Kitaev coupling $K$ and the off-diagonal anisotropy $Gamma$. Remarkably, in the regime of interest, the field $H^ast$ at which the incommensurate component vanishes, depends essentially only on $J$, which allows to extract an estimate of $J!simeq!4K$ from reported measurements of $H^ast$. We also comment on recent experiments in pressurized $beta$-Li$_2$IrO$_3$ and conclude that $J$ decreases with pressure.
$^7$Li nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and terahertz (THz) spectroscopies are used to probe magnetic excitations and their field dependence in the hyperhoneycomb Kitaev magnet $beta$-Li$_2$IrO$_3$. Spin-lattice relaxation rate ($1/T_1$) measured dow
The layered honeycomb iridate $alpha$-Li$_2$IrO$_3$ displays an incommensurate magnetic structure with counterrotating moments on nearest-neighbor sites, proposed to be stabilized by strongly-frustrated anisotropic Kitaev interactions between spin-or
Temperature-pressure phase diagram of the Kitaev hyperhoneycomb iridate $beta$-Li$_2$IrO$_3$ is explored using magnetization, thermal expansion, magnetostriction, and muon spin rotation ($mu$SR) measurements, as well as single-crystal x-ray diffracti
The family of edge-sharing tri-coordinated iridates and ruthenates has emerged in recent years as a major platform for Kitaev spin liquid physics, where spins fractionalize into emergent magnetic fluxes and Majorana fermions with Dirac-like dispersio
Honeycomb iridates are thought to have strongly spin-anisotropic exchange interactions that could lead to an extraordinary state of matter known as the Kitaev quantum spin liquid. The realization of this state requires almost perfectly frustrated int