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Antiferromagnetic order induced by an applied magnetic field in a high-temperature superconductor

Author

Listed:
  • B. Lake

    (Oak Ridge National Laboratory, PO Box 2008 MS 6430
    University of Oxford)

  • H. M. Rønnow

    (CEA (MDN/SPSMS/DRFMC))

  • N. B. Christensen

    (Risø National Laboratory
    Ørsted Laboratory, Niels Bohr Institute for APG)

  • G. Aeppli

    (Risø National Laboratory
    NEC Research Institute)

  • K. Lefmann

    (Risø National Laboratory)

  • D. F. McMorrow

    (Risø National Laboratory)

  • P. Vorderwisch

    (BENSC, Hahn-Meitner Institut)

  • P. Smeibidl

    (BENSC, Hahn-Meitner Institut)

  • N. Mangkorntong

    (Graduate School of Frontier Sciences, University of Tokyo)

  • T. Sasagawa

    (Graduate School of Frontier Sciences, University of Tokyo)

  • M. Nohara

    (Graduate School of Frontier Sciences, University of Tokyo)

  • H. Takagi

    (Graduate School of Frontier Sciences, University of Tokyo)

  • T. E. Mason

    (Spallation Neutron Source)

Abstract

One view of the high-transition-temperature (high-Tc) copper oxide superconductors is that they are conventional superconductors where the pairing occurs between weakly interacting quasiparticles (corresponding to the electrons in ordinary metals), although the theory has to be pushed to its limit1. An alternative view is that the electrons organize into collective textures (for example, charge and spin stripes) which cannot be ‘mapped’ onto the electrons in ordinary metals. Understanding the properties of the material would then need quantum field theories of objects such as textures and strings, rather than point-like electrons2,3,4,5,6. In an external magnetic field, magnetic flux penetrates type II superconductors via vortices, each carrying one flux quantum7. The vortices form lattices of resistive material embedded in the non-resistive superconductor, and can reveal the nature of the ground state—for example, a conventional metal or an ordered, striped phase—which would have appeared had superconductivity not intervened, and which provides the best starting point for a pairing theory. Here we report that for one high-Tc superconductor, the applied field that imposes the vortex lattice also induces ‘striped’ antiferromagnetic order. Ordinary quasiparticle models can account for neither the strength of the order nor the nearly field-independent antiferromagnetic transition temperature observed in our measurements.

Suggested Citation

  • B. Lake & H. M. Rønnow & N. B. Christensen & G. Aeppli & K. Lefmann & D. F. McMorrow & P. Vorderwisch & P. Smeibidl & N. Mangkorntong & T. Sasagawa & M. Nohara & H. Takagi & T. E. Mason, 2002. "Antiferromagnetic order induced by an applied magnetic field in a high-temperature superconductor," Nature, Nature, vol. 415(6869), pages 299-302, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:nature:v:415:y:2002:i:6869:d:10.1038_415299a
    DOI: 10.1038/415299a
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