Bi-altermagnetism unveiled by sublattice-specific circular dichroism in resonant inelastic X-ray scattering
Pith reviewed 2026-05-17 03:39 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Circular dichroism in resonant inelastic X-ray scattering detects bi-altermagnetism by revealing symmetry breaking on two distinct magnetic sublattices in Fe2Mo3O8.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Bi-altermagnetism in Fe2Mo3O8 consists of two altermagnetic sublattices—one with alternating quasi-octahedral Fe environments and the other with alternating tetrahedral Fe environments—whose combined order along the c axis breaks mirror symmetry, producing sublattice-specific circular dichroism in RIXS even in an achiral system with zero net magnetization. Model calculations with this order reproduce the CD signals.
What carries the argument
Sublattice-specific circular dichroism in RIXS, which acts as a probe of mirror-symmetry breaking associated with bi-altermagnetic order on both the octahedral and tetrahedral Fe sites.
If this is right
- Bi-altermagnetic order can be confirmed in other zero-magnetization insulators using RIXS-CD.
- The technique distinguishes magnetic behavior on different sublattices in complex magnetic structures.
- Systems with multiple altermagnetic sublattices may show enhanced or unique symmetry-breaking effects.
- Calculations based on c-axis bi-altermagnetic order provide a framework for predicting CD in similar materials.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Bi-altermagnetism might enable new spintronic devices that operate without external magnetic fields due to the combined properties of multiple sublattices.
- This approach could be extended to probe altermagnetic orders in other correlated insulators or even under different experimental conditions like varying temperature or pressure.
- Neighboring problems in condensed matter physics, such as understanding PT symmetry breaking in multi-sublattice systems, may benefit from similar dichroism measurements.
Load-bearing premise
The observed circular dichroism arises specifically from mirror-symmetry breaking due to bi-altermagnetic order on both sublattices rather than from other possible symmetry-lowering effects or experimental artifacts.
What would settle it
If experiments on Fe2Mo3O8 show no circular dichroism or if the dichroism does not match the predictions from the bi-altermagnetic model with order along the c axis, or if it appears uniformly across sites rather than sublattice-specific, the claim would be falsified.
Figures
read the original abstract
An altermagnet is a recently identified class of magnets that exhibit a zero net magnetic moment but break symmetry under the combined operations of parity and time reversal. It typically consists of two magnetic sites of opposite spins related by rotation within the unit cell. Here, we use circular dichroism (CD) in resonant inelastic X-ray scattering (RIXS) to identify a new form of altermagnetism, namely bi-altermagnetism, in the correlated insulator Fe2Mo3O8, which comprises two altermagnetic sublattices: one with alternating quasi-octahedral Fe environments and the other with alternating tetrahedral Fe environments. We experimentally revealed the emergence of CD in an achiral, zero-magnetization system, thereby probing mirror-symmetry breaking associated with altermagnetic order. Notably, the CD appeared at sublattice-specific excitations of the octahedral and tetrahedral sites, indicating symmetry breaking in both altermagnetic sublattices. Calculations based on a model with the bi-altermagnetic order along the c axis successfully reproduce the observed CD. Our findings provide compelling evidence for bi-altermagnetism in Fe2Mo3O8, and showcase the use of RIXS-CD as a probe of magnetic sublattices in systems with zero net magnetization.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper claims to identify a new form of altermagnetism termed bi-altermagnetism in the zero-net-magnetization correlated insulator Fe2Mo3O8. Using resonant inelastic X-ray scattering with circular dichroism (RIXS-CD), the authors report sublattice-specific CD signals at excitations associated with quasi-octahedral and tetrahedral Fe sites. They show that a model incorporating bi-altermagnetic order along the c-axis reproduces the observed CD, interpreting this as evidence of mirror-symmetry breaking on both magnetic sublattices and positioning RIXS-CD as a probe for such compensated magnetic order.
Significance. If the central claim is substantiated, the work is significant for introducing bi-altermagnetism as a distinct realization involving two altermagnetic sublattices and for demonstrating RIXS-CD as a sublattice-resolved probe in achiral, zero-moment systems. This could advance experimental characterization of altermagnets and correlated insulators, with potential implications for symmetry-breaking studies in compensated magnets.
major comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract: The claim that 'Calculations based on a model with the bi-altermagnetic order along the c axis successfully reproduce the observed CD' is presented without quantitative metrics of agreement (e.g., chi-squared, residual analysis), error bars on the experimental CD data, or details on data exclusion criteria. This information is load-bearing for assessing whether the reproduction is robust or could arise from other symmetry-lowering mechanisms.
- [Results/Discussion] Results/Discussion (modeling section): No comparisons are provided to alternative models, such as different magnetic configurations preserving zero net moment, structural distortions, or experimental geometry artifacts that could generate similar CD at the reported excitations. Without ruling these out, agreement with the bi-altermagnetic model alone does not establish uniqueness for the mirror-symmetry breaking interpretation on both sublattices.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract: The introduction of 'bi-altermagnetism' would benefit from a concise inline definition or reference to distinguish it from standard altermagnetism before describing the two sublattices.
- [Figures] Figure captions (assumed from typical structure): Ensure all RIXS spectra and CD plots include explicit labels for octahedral vs. tetrahedral site contributions and polarization geometries to improve clarity for readers.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their careful reading of our manuscript and for providing constructive feedback. We address each of the major comments below and have revised the manuscript accordingly to strengthen the presentation of our results.
read point-by-point responses
-
Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: The claim that 'Calculations based on a model with the bi-altermagnetic order along the c axis successfully reproduce the observed CD' is presented without quantitative metrics of agreement (e.g., chi-squared, residual analysis), error bars on the experimental CD data, or details on data exclusion criteria. This information is load-bearing for assessing whether the reproduction is robust or could arise from other symmetry-lowering mechanisms.
Authors: We agree that providing quantitative metrics and error bars would improve the robustness assessment. In the revised manuscript, we will add error bars to the experimental circular dichroism data and include a quantitative comparison, such as a chi-squared value or residual analysis, between the experimental and calculated spectra. Additionally, we will provide details on the data exclusion criteria in the methods section. These additions will help confirm that the agreement is not coincidental. revision: yes
-
Referee: [Results/Discussion] Results/Discussion (modeling section): No comparisons are provided to alternative models, such as different magnetic configurations preserving zero net moment, structural distortions, or experimental geometry artifacts that could generate similar CD at the reported excitations. Without ruling these out, agreement with the bi-altermagnetic model alone does not establish uniqueness for the mirror-symmetry breaking interpretation on both sublattices.
Authors: We have examined alternative explanations and find that they do not account for the observed sublattice-specific CD. For instance, structural distortions without magnetic order would not produce the energy-dependent CD signals tied to the Fe d-d excitations. Similarly, other zero-net-moment configurations lack the mirror symmetry breaking on both sublattices required to match the CD signs at octahedral and tetrahedral sites. To make this explicit, we will add comparisons to these alternative models in the revised manuscript, demonstrating that the bi-altermagnetic order provides the best and unique fit to the data. revision: yes
Circularity Check
Experimental observation of CD reproduced by bi-altermagnetic model; no derivation reduces to fitted input by construction
full rationale
The paper's central claim rests on experimental detection of sublattice-specific circular dichroism in an achiral zero-magnetization system, followed by a model calculation that reproduces the observed CD. No equations or steps are presented in which a prediction is defined in terms of the target quantity itself, nor is a uniqueness theorem imported from self-citation to force the interpretation. The modeling step is described only as successful reproduction rather than a parameter-free first-principles derivation or a fit that is then relabeled as a prediction. This places the work in the normal non-circular range (0-2) for an experimental study whose load-bearing evidence is the raw CD signal rather than a closed mathematical loop.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
Lean theorems connected to this paper
-
IndisputableMonolith/Cost/FunctionalEquation.leanwashburn_uniqueness_aczel unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
Calculations based on a model with the bi-altermagnetic order along the c axis successfully reproduce the observed CD.
-
IndisputableMonolith/Foundation/AlexanderDuality.leanalexander_duality_circle_linking unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
the mirror symmetries with respect to the three mirror planes are broken by the Néel order with the spin directions along the crystallographic c axis
What do these tags mean?
- matches
- The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
- supports
- The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
- extends
- The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
- uses
- The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
- contradicts
- The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
- unclear
- Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
-
[1]
LDA+DMFT approach to core-level spec- troscopy: Application to 3d transition metal compounds
Atsushi Hariki, Takayuki Uozumi, and Jan Kune ˇs. LDA+DMFT approach to core-level spec- troscopy: Application to 3d transition metal compounds. Phys. Rev. B, 96:045111, Jul 2017
work page 2017
-
[2]
Charge transfer excitation in resonant x-ray emission spectroscopy of NiO
Masahiko Matsubara, Takayuki Uozumi, Akio Kotani, and Jean Claude Parlebas. Charge transfer excitation in resonant x-ray emission spectroscopy of NiO. J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. , 74(7):2052–2060, 2005
work page 2052
-
[3]
Potential-barrier effects in photoabsorption
Jack Sugar. Potential-barrier effects in photoabsorption. ii. interpretation of photoabsorption resonances in lanthanide metals at the 4d-electron threshold. Phys. Rev. B, 5:1785–1792, Mar 1972. 10
work page 1972
-
[4]
Temperature dependence of 2p-core x-ray absorption spectra in 3d transition-metal compounds
Arata Tanaka and Takeo Jo. Temperature dependence of 2p-core x-ray absorption spectra in 3d transition-metal compounds. J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. , 61(6):2040–2047, 1992
work page 2040
-
[5]
F. M. F. de Groot, J. C. Fuggle, B. T. Thole, and G. A. Sawatzky. 2p x-ray absorption of 3d transition-metal compounds: An atomic multiplet description including the crystal field. Phys. Rev. B, 42:5459–5468, Sep 1990
work page 1990
-
[6]
Ru-Pan Wang, Atsushi Hariki, Andrii Sotnikov, Federica Frati, Jun Okamoto, Hsiao-Y u Huang, Amol Singh, Di-Jing Huang, Keisuke Tomiyasu, Chao-Hung Du, Jan Kune ˇs, and Frank M. F. de Groot. Excitonic dispersion of the intermediate spin state in LaCoO 3 revealed by resonant inelastic x-ray scattering. Phys. Rev. B, 98:035149, Jul 2018
work page 2018
-
[7]
Brookes, Y ohei Uemura, Mahnaz Ghiasi, Frank M
Atsushi Hariki, Ru-Pan Wang, Andrii Sotnikov, Keisuke Tomiyasu, Davide Betto, Nicholas B. Brookes, Y ohei Uemura, Mahnaz Ghiasi, Frank M. F. de Groot, and Jan Kune ˇs. Damping of spinful excitons in LaCoO 3 by thermal fluctuations: Theory and experiment. Phys. Rev. B , 101:245162, Jun 2020
work page 2020
- [8]
-
[9]
A. Hariki, A. Dal Din, O. J. Amin, T. Y amaguchi, A. Badura, D. Kriegner, K. W. Edmonds, R. P . Campion, P . Wadley, D. Backes, L. S. I. V eiga, S. S. Dhesi, G. Springholz, L. ˇSmejkal, K. V ´yborn´y, T. Jungwirth, and J. Kune ˇs. X-Ray Magnetic Circular Dichroism in Altermag- netic α -MnTe . Phys. Rev. Lett., 132:176701, Apr 2024
work page 2024
-
[10]
Microscopic toy model for magnetoelectric effect in polar Fe2Mo3O8
IV Solovyev and SV Streltsov. Microscopic toy model for magnetoelectric effect in polar Fe2Mo3O8. Phys. Rev. Mater ., 3(11):114402, 2019
work page 2019
-
[11]
S. Reschke, A. A. Tsirlin, N. Khan, L. Prodan, V . Tsurkan, I. K ´ezsm´arki, and J. Deisenhofer. Structure, phonons, and orbital degrees of freedom in Fe 2Mo3O8. Phys. Rev. B, 102:094307, Sep 2020. 11
work page 2020
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.