| Literature DB >> 21273481 |
R Okazaki1, T Shibauchi, H J Shi, Y Haga, T D Matsuda, E Yamamoto, Y Onuki, H Ikeda, Y Matsuda.
Abstract
A second-order phase transition is characterized by spontaneous symmetry breaking. The nature of the broken symmetry in the so-called "hidden-order" phase transition in the heavy-fermion compound URu(2)Si(2), at transition temperature T(h) = 17.5 K, has posed a long-standing mystery. We report the emergence of an in-plane anisotropy of the magnetic susceptibility below T(h), which breaks the four-fold rotational symmetry of the tetragonal URu(2)Si(2). Two-fold oscillations in the magnetic torque under in-plane field rotation were sensitively detected in small pure crystals. Our findings suggest that the hidden-order phase is an electronic "nematic" phase, a translationally invariant metallic phase with spontaneous breaking of rotational symmetry.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21273481 DOI: 10.1126/science.1197358
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728