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Caltech

Condensed Matter Physics Seminar

Monday, October 14, 2013
4:00pm to 5:00pm
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East Bridge 114
Hidden (Hastatic) Order in URu2Si2
Rebbeca Flint, Professor, Iowa State University,

The development of collective long-range order occurs by the spontaneous breaking of fundamental symmetries, but the broken symmetry that develops below 17.5K in the heavy fermion material URu2Si2 has eluded identification for over twenty five years – while there is clear mean-field-like specific heat anomaly, the absence of any large observable order parameter has given the problem the name "hidden order."

In this talk, I will show how the recent observation of heavy Ising quasiparticles in the hidden order phase provides the missing puzzle piece. To form Ising quasiparticles, the conduction electrons must hybridize with a local Ising moment - a 5f2 state of the uranium atom with integer spin. As the hybridization mixes states of integer and half-integer spin, it is itself a spinor and this ``hastatic'' (hasta: [Latin] spear) order parameter therefore breaks both time-reversal and double time-reversal symmetries. A microscopic theory of hastatic order naturally unites a number of disparate experimental results from the large entropy of condensation to the spin rotational symmetry breaking seen in torque magnetometry. Hastatic order also has a number of experimental consequences, most notably a tiny transverse magnetic moment in the conduction electrons.

For more information, please contact Jonathan Gross by email at [email protected].