Berry phase mechanism for optical gyrotropy in stripe-ordered cuprates
J. Orenstein, Joel E. Moore

TL;DR
This paper explains optical gyrotropy in stripe-ordered cuprates as arising from Berry curvature in chiral metals, linking it to the anomalous Hall effect and providing models that match experimental observations.
Contribution
It introduces a Berry curvature-based mechanism for optical gyrotropy in stripe-ordered cuprates, supported by theoretical models and comparison with experimental data.
Findings
Gyrotropy arises from Berry curvature in chiral metals.
Enhanced gyrotropic response with Rashba spin-orbit coupling.
Calculated polarization rotation matches experimental results.
Abstract
Optical gyrotropy, the lifting of degeneracy between left and right circularly polarized light, can be generated by either time-reversal or chiral symmetry breaking. In the high- superconductor LaBaCuO (LBCO), gyrotropy onsets at the same temperature as charge stripe order, suggesting that the rotation of the stripe direction from one plane to the next generates a helical pattern that breaks chiral symmetry. In order to further test this chiral stacking hypothesis it is necessary to develop an understanding of the physical mechanism by which chirality generates gyrotropy. In this paper we show that optical gyrotropy is a consequence of Berry curvature in the momentum space of chiral metals. We describe a physical picture showing that gyrotropy in chiral metals is closely related to the anomalous Hall effect in itinerant ferromagnets. We then calculate the magnitude…
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