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arxiv: 1204.4016 · v3 · pith:UTTHVP2Pnew · submitted 2012-04-18 · ❄️ cond-mat.str-el · cond-mat.supr-con

Emergent Rank-5 'Nematic' Order in URu2Si2

classification ❄️ cond-mat.str-el cond-mat.supr-con
keywords hidden-orderphasetransitionbeenmagneticmultipolenematicorder
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Novel electronic states resulting from entangled spin and orbital degrees of freedom are hallmarks of strongly correlated f-electron systems. A spectacular example is the so-called 'hidden-order' phase transition in the heavy-electron metal URu2Si2, which is characterized by the huge amount of entropy lost at T_{HO}=17.5K. However, no evidence of magnetic/structural phase transition has been found below T_{HO} so far. The origin of the hidden-order phase transition has been a long-standing mystery in condensed matter physics. Here, based on a first-principles theoretical approach, we examine the complete set of multipole correlations allowed in this material. The results uncover that the hidden-order parameter is a rank-5 multipole (dotriacontapole) order with 'nematic' E^- symmetry, which exhibits staggered pseudospin moments along the [110] direction. This naturally provides comprehensive explanations of all key features in the hidden-order phase including anisotropic magnetic excitations, nearly degenerate antiferromagnetic-ordered state, and spontaneous rotational-symmetry breaking.

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