Magnetic order without tetragonal-symmetry-breaking in iron arsenides: microscopic mechanism and spin-wave spectrum
Xiaoyu Wang, Jian Kang, and Rafael M. Fernandes

TL;DR
This paper investigates a novel magnetic state in iron arsenides that preserves tetragonal symmetry, characterized by a double-Q magnetic structure called orthomagnetic, and analyzes its spin-wave spectrum to distinguish it from stripe magnetic order.
Contribution
It introduces the orthomagnetic double-Q magnetic configuration as a natural state within an itinerant three-band model, explaining experimental observations of tetragonal magnetic phases.
Findings
Orthomagnetic state arises from deviations in nesting and residual interactions.
Three Goldstone modes are present in the orthomagnetic spin-wave spectrum.
Distinct anisotropic spin-wave branches can be detected via neutron scattering.
Abstract
Most iron-based superconductors undergo a transition to a magnetically ordered state characterized by staggered stripes of parallel spins. With ordering vectors or , this magnetic state breaks the high-temperature tetragonal symmetry of the system, which is manifested by a splitting of the lattice Bragg peaks. Remarkably, recent experiments in hole-doped iron arsenides reported an ordered state that displays magnetic Bragg peaks at and but remains tetragonal. Despite being inconsistent with a magnetic stripe configuration, this unusual magnetic phase can be described in terms of a double- magnetic structure consisting of an equal-weight superposition of the ordering vectors and . Here we show that a non-collinear double- magnetic configuration, dubbed \emph{orthomagnetic}, arises naturally within an…
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