Magnetospectroscopic Evidence for the Magnonic Superradiant Phase Transition in Erbium Orthoferrite
ORAL
Abstract
The superradiant phase transition (SRPT) occurs when the strength of the cooperative coupling of an ensemble of two-level atoms with a bosonic excitation exceeds a critical value, creating a new ground state that possesses a finite atomic polarization with concomitant boson condensation. Photonic SRPTs have been realized only in nonequilibrium situations. Recently, a magnonic SRPT has been theoretically demonstrated for erbium orthoferrite, ErFeO3, in thermal equilibrium. This material consists of two subsystems: (i) Er3+ ions, which can be viewed as an ensemble of two-level atoms, and (ii) Fe3+ ions with magnons, which are bosonic excitations. Ultrastrong coupling between the two subsystems causes a SRPT, inducing condensation of Fe3+ magnons and an Er3+ spin polarization. Here, we provide experimental evidence for the phase transition through GHz magnetospectroscopy. We varied the detuning between the lowest Er3+ atomic transition and the Fe3+ magnon excitation via an applied DC magnetic field. This process is equivalent to the threshold modulation of the Er3+–Fe3+ coupling strength for the SRPT, which allows us to measure a rapid decrease of the resonance frequency of Er3+ spins as the system crosses the superradiant-to-normal phase boundary. Our measurements relied on minute temperature changes of an ErFeO3 crystal owing to spin–lattice coupling, by which we were able to precisely monitor peak positions as a function of magnetic field.
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Presenters
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Dasom Kim
- Rice University