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A promising route to realize entangled magnetic states combines geometrical frustration with quantum-tunneling effects. Spin-ice materials are canonical examples of frustration, and Ising spins in a transverse magnetic field are the simplest many-body model of quantum tunneling. Here, we show that the tripod kagome lattice material Ho3Mg2Sb3O14 unites an ice-like magnetic degeneracy with quantum-tunneling terms generated by an intrinsic splitting of the Ho3+ ground-state doublet, realizing a frustrated transverse Ising model. Using neutron scattering and thermodynamic experiments, we observe a symmetry-breaking transition at T*~0.32 K to a remarkable quantum state with three peculiarities: a continuous magnetic excitation spectrum down to T~0.12K; a macroscopic degeneracy of ice-like states; and a fragmentation of the spin into periodic and aperiodic components strongly affected by quantum fluctuations. Our results establish that Ho3Mg2Sb3O14 realizes a spin-fragmented state on the kagome lattice, with intrinsic quantum dynamics generated by a homogeneous transverse field.
A promising route to realize entangled magnetic states combines geometrical frustration with quantum-tunneling effects. Spin-ice materials are canonical examples of frustration, and Ising spins in a transverse magnetic field are the simplest many-bod
The search for two dimensional quantum spin liquids, exotic magnetic states with an entangled ground state remaining disordered down to zero temperature, has been a great challenge in frustrated magnetism during the last decades. Recently, fractional
Geometrical frustration in magnetic materials often gives rise to exotic, low-temperature states of matter, like the ones observed in spin ices. Here we report the imaging of the magnetic states of a thermally-active artificial magnetic ice that reve
Fractionalised excitations that emerge from a many body system have revealed rich physics and concepts, from composite fermions in two-dimensional electron systems, revealed through the fractional quantum Hall effect, to spinons in antiferromagnetic
Recent work has highlighted remarkable effects of classical thermal fluctuations in the dipolar spin ice compounds, such as artificial magnetostatics, manifesting as Coulombic power-law spin correlations and particles behaving as diffusive magnetic m