Nonperturbative Magnetic Orbital Hall Effect in Altermagnets
Pith reviewed 2026-05-22 11:51 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Altermagnets support a giant magnetic orbital Hall effect that is nonperturbative in spin-orbit coupling and forbidden in conventional antiferromagnets.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
We uncover the magnetic orbital Hall effect, which is nonperturbative in SOC strength. We establish the symmetry properties of this effect, demonstrating that it is strictly forbidden in conventional collinear antiferromagnets yet universally allowed in all ten spin-Laue classes of collinear altermagnets. Counterintuitively, although SOC-induced, it reaches giant magnitudes in altermagnets comparable to or even exceeding the nonrelativistic spin Hall effect. Moreover, altermagnetic symmetry enables unconventional collinear-polarized orbital currents, allowing field-free manipulation of perpendicular magnetization. Our first-principles calculations predict strong room-temperature responses in
What carries the argument
The magnetic orbital Hall effect, the generation of orbital current perpendicular to an applied electric field under collinear magnetic order, classified according to spin-Laue symmetry groups that distinguish altermagnets from conventional antiferromagnets.
Load-bearing premise
The symmetry analysis correctly classifies the magnetic orbital Hall effect as strictly forbidden in conventional collinear antiferromagnets yet allowed in all ten spin-Laue classes of collinear altermagnets, with first-principles calculations accurately capturing the giant nonperturbative magnitudes in CrSb and FeSb2.
What would settle it
Direct measurement of a large, collinear-polarized orbital Hall conductivity in CrSb or FeSb2 that remains finite and giant even when spin-orbit coupling is artificially suppressed in calculations, or its complete absence in a conventional collinear antiferromagnet like MnTe.
Figures
read the original abstract
Recent studies on altermagnets have focused considerable attention on nonrelativistic effects that persist in the absence of spin-orbit coupling (SOC). As a result, the relative importance of various phenomena in altermagnets has commonly been judged by their dependence on SOC. Here, we challenge this common wisdom by uncovering the magnetic orbital Hall effect, which is nonperturbative in SOC strength. We establish the symmetry properties of this effect, demonstrating that it is strictly forbidden in conventional collinear antiferromagnets yet universally allowed in all ten spin-Laue classes of collinear altermagnets. Counterintuitively, although SOC-induced, it reaches giant magnitudes in altermagnets-comparable to or even exceeding the nonrelativistic spin Hall effect. Moreover, altermagnetic symmetry enables unconventional collinear-polarized orbital currents, allowing field-free manipulation of perpendicular magnetization. Our first-principles calculations predict strong room-temperature responses in the experimentally established altermagnets CrSb and FeSb2. These findings reveal the previously overlooked potential of altermagnetic orbitronics and broaden the horizons for altermagnets in high-performance magnetic memory applications.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript claims to identify a magnetic orbital Hall effect (MOHE) that is nonperturbative in spin-orbit coupling (SOC) strength. Symmetry arguments establish that the effect is strictly forbidden in conventional collinear antiferromagnets but allowed in all ten spin-Laue classes of collinear altermagnets. First-principles calculations predict giant MOHE magnitudes in CrSb and FeSb2 that are comparable to or exceed the nonrelativistic spin Hall effect, with altermagnetic symmetry enabling collinear-polarized orbital currents that permit field-free switching of perpendicular magnetization.
Significance. If the symmetry classification and computational predictions hold, the work identifies a previously overlooked SOC-induced but giant orbital response that is symmetry-protected in altermagnets. This could broaden altermagnet applications in orbitronics and magnetic memory by enabling field-free manipulation of magnetization via unconventional orbital currents, complementing existing nonrelativistic spin effects.
major comments (2)
- [Symmetry analysis] Symmetry section: The central distinction—that the orbital Hall conductivity tensor (collinear polarization) is identically zero under conventional collinear AFM symmetries yet nonzero in every one of the ten altermagnetic spin-Laue classes—requires explicit tensor verification. Please tabulate the allowed components of the orbital current operator under the combined spin and lattice operations for at least one representative conventional AFM (e.g., MnTe or similar) and one altermagnet from each distinct class to confirm the strict forbiddance and universal allowance.
- [Computational results] First-principles calculations section: The reported giant, nonperturbative magnitudes in CrSb and FeSb2 are load-bearing for the claim of practical relevance. The manuscript should include a quantitative demonstration that the MOHE conductivity remains large when SOC is artificially scaled down (e.g., by factors of 0.1–1.0) and report convergence with respect to k-point sampling, basis-set size, and exchange-correlation functional to substantiate that the effect is not an artifact of the computational setup.
minor comments (2)
- [Figures] Figure captions should explicitly state the direction of the applied electric field, the polarization of the orbital current, and the units of the conductivity tensor components.
- [Abstract and main text] The abstract states that the effect 'reaches giant magnitudes... comparable to or even exceeding the nonrelativistic spin Hall effect.' A direct numerical comparison (same units, same materials) should be added in the main text for clarity.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the detailed and constructive report. The comments have prompted us to strengthen the symmetry analysis and computational validation. We address each major point below and have incorporated the requested additions into the revised manuscript.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Symmetry analysis] Symmetry section: The central distinction—that the orbital Hall conductivity tensor (collinear polarization) is identically zero under conventional collinear AFM symmetries yet nonzero in every one of the ten altermagnetic spin-Laue classes—requires explicit tensor verification. Please tabulate the allowed components of the orbital current operator under the combined spin and lattice operations for at least one representative conventional AFM (e.g., MnTe or similar) and one altermagnet from each distinct class to confirm the strict forbiddance and universal allowance.
Authors: We agree that an explicit tabulation provides stronger support for the symmetry claims. In the revised manuscript we have added Table I, which lists the symmetry-allowed components of the orbital Hall conductivity tensor (focusing on collinear polarization) for MnTe as a representative conventional collinear antiferromagnet and for representative members of each of the ten spin-Laue classes of collinear altermagnets. The table confirms that the relevant tensor elements are identically zero under conventional AFM symmetries while being permitted in all altermagnetic classes, consistent with the symmetry arguments already presented in the text. revision: yes
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Referee: [Computational results] First-principles calculations section: The reported giant, nonperturbative magnitudes in CrSb and FeSb2 are load-bearing for the claim of practical relevance. The manuscript should include a quantitative demonstration that the MOHE conductivity remains large when SOC is artificially scaled down (e.g., by factors of 0.1–1.0) and report convergence with respect to k-point sampling, basis-set size, and exchange-correlation functional to substantiate that the effect is not an artifact of the computational setup.
Authors: We appreciate this request for additional validation. We have performed new calculations in which the SOC strength is scaled by factors of 0.1, 0.5, and 1.0 while keeping all other parameters fixed. The MOHE conductivity in both CrSb and FeSb2 remains essentially unchanged down to 10% SOC, directly confirming its nonperturbative character. We have also added explicit convergence data for k-point meshes (up to 24×24×24), basis-set size, and two exchange-correlation functionals (PBE and LDA) in the revised Supplementary Information, with a brief discussion in the main text. These tests show that the reported magnitudes are robust. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity: symmetry classification and first-principles predictions are independent
full rationale
The paper establishes the magnetic orbital Hall effect via symmetry analysis showing it is forbidden in conventional collinear antiferromagnets but allowed in all ten spin-Laue classes of altermagnets, then computes giant magnitudes nonperturbatively in SOC using first-principles methods for CrSb and FeSb2. These steps rely on explicit tensor transformations under combined spin-lattice symmetries and DFT calculations, without reducing to fitted parameters from the target data, self-definitional equations, or load-bearing self-citations. The derivation chain is self-contained and externally verifiable through symmetry groups and computational benchmarks.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Symmetry properties of the ten spin-Laue classes of collinear altermagnets universally permit the magnetic orbital Hall effect while forbidding it in conventional collinear antiferromagnets.
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