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Observation of Pines' Demon in Sr$_2$RuO$_4$

Authors :
Husain, A. A.
Huang, E. W.
Mitrano, M.
Rak, M. S.
Rubeck, S. I.
Guo, X.
Yang, H.
Sow, C.
Maeno, Y.
Uchoa, B.
Chiang, T. C.
Batson, P. E.
Phillips, P. W.
Abbamonte, P.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The characteristic excitation of a metal is its plasmon, which is a quantized collective oscillation of its electron density. In 1956, David Pines predicted that a distinct type of plasmon, dubbed a "demon," could exist in three-dimensional metals containing more than one species of charge carrier. Consisting of out-of-phase movement of electrons in different bands, demons are acoustic, electrically neutral, and do not couple to light, so have never been detected in an equilibrium, three-dimensional metal. Nevertheless, demons are believed to be critical for diverse phenomena including phase transitions in mixed-valence semimetals, optical properties of metal nanoparticles, "soundarons" in Weyl semimetals, and high temperature superconductivity in, for example, metal hydrides. Here, we present evidence for a demon in Sr$_2$RuO$_4$ from momentum-resolved electron energy-loss spectroscopy (M-EELS). Formed of electrons in the $\beta$ and $\gamma$ bands, the demon is gapless with a room temperature velocity $v=1.065 \pm 0.12 \times 10^5$ m/s and critical momentum $q_c=0.08$ reciprocal lattice units. Its spectral weight violates low-energy partial sum rules, affirming its neutral character. Our study confirms a 66-year old prediction and suggests that demons may be a pervasive feature of multiband metals.<br />Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures ; Revised to include a complete analysis of the gapless collective mode

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2007.06670
Document Type :
Working Paper