From supefluid 3He to altermagnets
The Pauli exclusion principle combined with interactions between fermions is a unifying basic mechanism that can give rise to quantum phases with spin order in diverse physical systems. Transition-metal ferromagnets, with isotropic ordering respecting crystallographic rotation symmetries and with a...
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Main Authors | , , , , , |
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Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
01.11.2024
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | The Pauli exclusion principle combined with interactions between fermions is
a unifying basic mechanism that can give rise to quantum phases with spin order
in diverse physical systems. Transition-metal ferromagnets, with isotropic
ordering respecting crystallographic rotation symmetries and with a net
magnetization, are a relatively common manifestation of this mechanism, leading
to numerous practical applications, e.g., in spintronic information
technologies. In contrast, superfluid $^3$He has been a unique and fragile
manifestation, in which the spin-ordered phase is anisotropic, breaking the
real-space rotation symmetries, and has zero net magnetization. The recently
discovered altermagnets share the spin-ordered anisotropic zero-magnetization
nature of superfluid $^3$He. Yet, altermagnets appear to be even more abundant
than ferromagnets, can be robust, and are projected to offer superior
scalability for spintronics compared to ferromagnets. Our Perspective revisits
the decades of research of the spin-ordered anisotropic zero-magnetization
phases including, besides superfluid $^3$He, also theoretically conceived
counterparts in nematic electronic liquid-crystal phases. While all sharing the
same extraordinary character of symmetry breaking, we highlight the
distinctions in microscopic physics which set altermagnets apart and enable
their robust and abundant material realizations. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2411.00717 |