Hidden one-dimensional spin modulation in a three-dimensional metal

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作者
Yejun Feng
Jiyang Wang
A. Palmer
J. A. Aguiar
B. Mihaila
J.-Q. Yan
P. B. Littlewood
T. F. Rosenbaum
机构
[1] The Advanced Photon Source,The James Franck Institute and Department of Physics
[2] Argonne National Laboratory,Materials Science and Technology Division
[3] University of Chicago,Physics Division
[4] Los Alamos National Laboratory,Department of Materials Science and Engineering
[5] National Science Foundation,Materials Science and Technology Division
[6] University of Tennessee,undefined
[7] Oak Ridge National Laboratory,undefined
[8] Physical Sciences and Engineering,undefined
[9] Argonne National Laboratory,undefined
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Pressure can transform a transparent material into an opaque one, quench the moments in a magnet and force solids to flow like liquids. At 15 GPa, the pressure found 500 km below the earth’s surface, the semiconductors silicon and germanium superconduct. Yet, at this same pressure, we show here that the magnetism in metallic GdSi remains completely robust even as it shrinks by one-seventh of its volume. Non-resonant X-ray magnetic diffraction in a specially designed diamond anvil cell, combined with band structure calculations, reveal the stability of the incommensurate spin density wave, which can be traced to a persistently nested portion of the Fermi surface that becomes increasingly one-dimensional under pressure. A cooperative interaction between nested, itinerant spins and local magnetic moments provides the organizing principle for the modulated magnetic order, salient both for its insights into the role of topology in ordered states and its potential functionality.
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