Singular charge fluctuations at a magnetic quantum critical point

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Abstract

Strange metal behavior is ubiquitous in correlated materials, ranging from cuprate superconductors to bilayer graphene, and may arise from physics beyond the quantum fluctuations of a Landau order parameter. In quantum-critical heavy-fermion antiferromagnets, such physics may be realized as critical Kondo entanglement of spin and charge and probed with optical conductivity. We present terahertz time-domain transmission spectroscopy on molecular beam epitaxy–grown thin films of YbRh2Si2, a model strange-metal compound. We observed frequency over temperature scaling of the optical conductivity as a hallmark of beyond-Landau quantum criticality. Our discovery suggests that critical charge fluctuations play a central role in the strange metal behavior, elucidating one of the long-standing mysteries of correlated quantum matter.

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Prochaska, L., Li, X., MacFarland, D. C., Andrews, A. M., Bonta, M., Bianco, E. F., … Paschen, S. (2020). Singular charge fluctuations at a magnetic quantum critical point. Science, 367(6475), 285–288. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aag1595

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