A quantum liquid of magnetic octupoles on the pyrochlore lattice
Romain Sibille, Nicolas Gauthier, Elsa Lhotel, Victor Por\'ee,, Vladimir Pomjakushin, Russell A. Ewings, Toby G. Perring, Jacques Ollivier,, Andrew Wildes, Clemens Ritter, Thomas C. Hansen, David A. Keen, G{\o}ran J., Nilsen, Lukas Keller, Sylvain Petit, Tom Fennell

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a quantum liquid state of magnetic octupoles in Ce$_2$Sn$_2$O$_7$, revealing complex multipolar correlations and a 'hidden' topological order beyond traditional spin liquids.
Contribution
It demonstrates that frustrated multipoles can form a quantum liquid with topological order, extending the concept of spin liquids to higher-rank multipolar degrees of freedom.
Findings
Neutron scattering shows fluid-like state with complex magnetization density.
Temperature dependence matches a dipole-octupole doublet model.
Presence of a continuum of excitations suggests spinon-like quasiparticles.
Abstract
Spin liquids are highly correlated yet disordered states formed by the entanglement of magnetic dipoles. Theories typically define such states using gauge fields and deconfined quasiparticle excitations that emerge from a simple rule governing the local ground state of a frustrated magnet. For example, the '2-in-2-out' ice rule for dipole moments on a tetrahedron can lead to a quantum spin ice in rare-earth pyrochlores - a state described by a lattice gauge theory of quantum electrodynamics. However, f-electron ions often carry multipole degrees of freedom of higher rank than dipoles, leading to intriguing behaviours and 'hidden' orders. Here we show that the correlated ground state of a Ce-based pyrochlore, CeSnO, is a quantum liquid of magnetic octupoles. Our neutron scattering results are consistent with the formation of a fluid-like state of…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
