Field-induced magnetic instability within a superconducting condensate

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Abstract

The application of magnetic fields, chemical substitution, or hydrostatic pressure to strongly correlated electron materials can stabilize electronic phases with different organizational principles. We present evidence for a fieldinduced quantum phase transition, in superconducting Nd0.05Ce0.95CoIn5, that separates two antiferromagnetic phases with identical magnetic symmetry. At zero field, we find a spin-density wave that is suppressed at the critical field m0H = 8 T. For H > H , a spin-density phase emerges and shares many properties with the Q phase in CeCoIn5. These results suggest that the magnetic instability is not magnetically driven, and we propose that it is driven by a modification of superconducting condensate at H 2017.

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Mazzone, D. G., Raymond, S., Gavilano, J. L., Ressouche, E., Niedermayer, C., Birk, J. O., … Kenzelmann, M. (2017). Field-induced magnetic instability within a superconducting condensate. Science Advances, 3(5). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.1602055

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