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Experimental signature of the attractive Coulomb force between positive and negative magnetic monopoles in spin ice

Nature Physics, ISSN: 1745-2481, Vol: 12, Issue: 7, Page: 661-666
2016
  • 33
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 61
    Captures
  • 0
    Mentions
  • 10
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    33
    • Citation Indexes
      33
  • Captures
    61
  • Social Media
    10
    • Shares, Likes & Comments
      10
      • Facebook
        10

Article Description

A non-Ohmic current that grows exponentially with the square root of applied electric field is well known from thermionic field emission (the Schottky effect), electrolytes (the second Wien effect) and semiconductors (the Poole-Frenkel effect). It is a universal signature of the attractive Coulomb force between positive and negative electrical charges, which is revealed as the charges are driven in opposite directions by the force of an applied electric field. Here we apply thermal quenches to spin ice to prepare metastable populations of bound pairs of positive and negative emergent magnetic monopoles at millikelvin temperatures. We find that the application of a magnetic field results in a universal exponential-root field growth of magnetic current, thus confirming the microscopic Coulomb force between the magnetic monopole quasiparticles and establishing a magnetic analogue of the Poole-Frenkel effect. At temperatures above 300 mK, gradual restoration of kinetic monopole equilibria causes the non-Ohmic current to smoothly evolve into the high-field Wien effect for magnetic monopoles, as confirmed by comparison to a recent and rigorous theory of the Wien effect in spin ice. Our results extend the universality of the exponential-root field form into magnetism and illustrate the power of emergent particle kinetics to describe far-from-equilibrium response in complex systems.

Bibliographic Details

C. Paulsen; E. Lhotel; S. R. Giblin; D. Prabhakaran; G. Balakrishnan; K. Matsuhira; S. T. Bramwell

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Physics and Astronomy

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