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Broken symmetries in solids involving higher order multipolar degrees of freedom are historically referred to as hidden orders due to the formidable task of detecting them with conventional probes. Examples of such hidden orders include spin-nematic order in quantum magnets, and quadrupolar or higher multipolar orders in various correlated quantum materials. In this work, we theoretically propose that the study of magnetostriction provides a powerful and novel tool to directly detect higher-order multipolar symmetry breaking $-$ such as the elusive octupolar order $-$ by examining its scaling behaviour with respect to an applied magnetic field $h$. As an illustrative example, we examine such key scaling signatures in the context of Pr-based cage compounds with strongly correlated $f$-electrons, Pr(Ti,V,Ir)$_2$(Al,Zn)$_{20}$, whose low energy degrees of freedom are composed of purely higher-order multipoles: quadrupoles $mathcal{O}_{20,22}$ and octupole $mathcal{T}_{xyz}$. Employing a symmetry-based Landau theory of multipolar moments coupled to lattice strain fields, we demonstrate that a magnetic field applied along the [111] direction results in a length change with a distinct linear-in-$h$ scaling behaviour, accompanied by hysteresis, below the octupolar ordering temperature. We show that the resulting magnetostriction coefficient is directly proportional to the octupolar order parameter, providing the first clear access to this subtle order parameter. Along other field directions, we show that the field dependence of the magnetostriction provides a window into quadrupolar orders. Our work provides a springboard for future experimental and theoretical investigations of multipolar orders and their quantum phase transitions in a wide variety of systems.
We demonstrate that the volume of the Fermi surface, measured very precisely using de Haas-van Alphen oscillations, can be used to probe changes in the nature and occupancy of localized electronic states. In systems with unconventional ordered states
In contrast to magnetic order formed by electrons dipolar moments, ordering phenomena associated with higher-order multipoles (quadrupoles, octupoles, etc.) are more difficult to characterize because of the limited choice of experimental probes that
The hidden order developing below 17.5K in the heavy fermion material URu2Si2 has eluded identification for over twenty five years. This paper will review the recent theory of ``hastatic order, a novel two-component order parameter capturing the hybr
The nature of order in low-temperature phases of some materials is not directly seen by experiment. Such hidden orders (HO) may inspire decades of research to identify the mechanism underlying those exotic states of matter. In insulators, HO phases o
We review recent progress in point contact spectroscopy (PCS) to extract spectroscopic information out of correlated electron materials, with the emphasis on non-superconducting states. PCS has been used to detect bosonic excitations in normal metals