Only a few metallic phases have been identified in pure crystalline materials. These include normal, ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic metals, systems with spin and charge density wave order, and superconductors. Fermi-liquid theory provides a basis for the description of all of these phases. It has been suggested that non-Fermi-liquid phases of metals may exist in some heavy-fermion compounds(1,2) and oxide materials(3-6), but the discovery of a characteristic microscopic signature of such phases presents a major challenge. The transition-metal compound MnSi above a certain pressure (p(c)=14.6 kbar) provides what may be the cleanest example of an extended non-Fermi-liquid phase in a three-dimensional metal(7-9). The bulk properties of MnSi suggest that long-range magnetic order is suppressed at p(c) (refs 7-12). Here we report neutron diffraction measurements of MnSi, revealing that sizeable quasi-static magnetic moments survive far into the non-Fermi-liquid phase. These moments are organized in an unusual pattern with partial long-range order. Our observation supports the existence of novel metallic phases with partial ordering of the conduction electrons (reminiscent of liquid crystals), as proposed for the high-temperature superconductors(4-6) and heavy-fermion compounds(13).
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Univ Calif Santa Barbara, Dept Phys, Santa Barbara, CA 93106 USA
Harvard Univ, Dept Phys, Cambridge, MA 02138 USAUniv Calif Santa Barbara, Dept Phys, Santa Barbara, CA 93106 USA
Levin, Michael
Senthil, T.
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MIT, Dept Phys, Cambridge, MA 02139 USAUniv Calif Santa Barbara, Dept Phys, Santa Barbara, CA 93106 USA