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FeSe$_{x}$Te$_{1-x}$ compounds present a complex phase diagram, ranging from the nematicity of FeSe to the $(pi, pi)$ magnetism of FeTe. We focus on FeSe$_{0.4}$Te$_{0.6}$, where the nematic ordering is absent at equilibrium. We use a time-resolved approach based on femtosecond light pulses to study the dynamics following photoexcitation in this system. The use of polarization-dependent time- and angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy allows us to reveal a photoinduced nematic metastable state, whose stabilization cannot be interpreted in terms of an effective photodoping. We argue that the 1.55 eV photon-energy-pump-pulse perturbs the $C_4$ symmetry of the system triggering the realization of the nematic state. The possibility to induce nematicity using an ultra-short pulse sheds a new light on the driving force behind the nematic symmetry breaking in iron-based superconductors. Our results weaken the idea that a low-energy coupling with fluctuations is a necessary condition to stabilize the nematic order and ascribe the origin of the nematic order in iron-based superconductors to a clear tendency of those systems towards orbital differentiation due to strong electronic correlations induced by the Hunds coupling.
We report on an apparent low-energy nanoscale electronic inhomogeneity in FeSe$_{0.4}$Te$_{0.6}$ due to the distribution of selenium and tellurium atoms revealed through unsupervised machine learning. Through an unsupervised clustering algorithm, cha
We measured the microwave surface impedance of FeSe$_{0.4}$Te$_{0.6}$ single crystals with- and without external magnetic fields. The superfluid density exhibited a quadratic temperature dependence, indicating a strong pair-breaking effect. The flux-
The electronic nematic phase is an unconventional state of matter that spontaneously breaks the rotational symmetry of electrons. In iron-pnictides/chalcogenides and cuprates, the nematic ordering and fluctuations have been suggested to have as-yet-u
We report microwave surface impedances of FeSe$_{0.4}$Te$_{0.6}$ single crystals measured at 12, 19, and 44 GHz. The penetration depth exhibits a power law behavior, $delta lambda_L=lambda_L (T)-lambda_L (0) propto CT^n$ with an exponent $nsimeq 2$,
Clarifying the origin of nematic state in FeSe is one of urgent problems in the field of iron-based superconductivity. Motivated by the discovery of a nematic solution in the density-functional theory implemented by on-site Coulomb interaction (DFT+$