Raman scattering spectroscopy as a probe of magnetic Weyl semimetal.

ORAL

Abstract

Experimental spectroscopic probe of electronic band structure close to the Fermi energy in order to prove an existence of Weyl nodes presents a challenge due to a need for high spectral resolution. Here we propose electronic Raman scattering (χ"(ω)) as a probe of Weyl nodes. In Weyl semimetal candidate Nd2Ir2O7 TRS breaking at TN=35 K is suggested to split a quadratic node into pairs of Weyl nodes. Experimentally, we observe an abrupt decrease of  χ"(ω) below 20 meV at TN. Our calculations of Raman scattering response of Weyl semimetals suggest two components of scattering. In semimetals, electronic scattering by quasiparticles possessing finite life is proportional to the electronic DOS. In Weyl semimetals, an additional non-zero contribution of scattering specific to the Weyl nodes originates from Berry flux, which necessarily introduces a momentum shift, resulting in a  χ"(ω)~ω2  frequency dependence. We discuss a correspondence of the low frequency  χ"(ω) in Nd2Ir2O7 spectra  to the theoretical predictions for Weyl semimetal.

*This work was supported as part of the Institute for Quantum Matter, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences under Award No. DE-SC0019331.

Presenters

  • Predrag Nikolic

    • George Mason University

Authors

  • Natalia Drichko

    • Johns Hopkins University
  • Yuanyuan Xu

    • Johns Hopkins University
  • Predrag Nikolic

    • George Mason University
  • Satoru Nakatsuji

    • Univ of Tokyo-Kashiwanoha
    • Department of Physics, University of Tokyo
    • The University of Tokyo
    • University of Tokyo, Japan
    • Univ of Tokyo
    • Dept. of Phys. Univ. of Tokyo
  • Takumi Ohtsuki

    • The University of Tokyo
    • ISSP, University of Tokyo, Japan
  • Takumi Ohtsuki

    • The University of Tokyo
    • ISSP, University of Tokyo, Japan