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Hybridized quadrupolar excitations in the spin-anisotropic frustrated magnet FeI2...

Publication Type
Journal
Journal Name
Nature Physics
Publication Date
Page Numbers
467 to 472
Volume
17
Issue
4

Magnetic order is usually associated with well-defined magnon excitations. Exotic magnetic fluctuations with fractional, topological or multipolar character have been proposed for unconventional forms of magnetic matter such as spin liquids1. As a result, considerable effort has been expended to search for, and uncover, low-spin materials with suppressed dipolar order at low temperatures2,3. However, long-range order of magnetic dipoles is much more common. Here we report neutron-scattering experiments and quantitative theoretical modelling of a spin-1 system—the uniaxial triangular magnet FeI2 (ref. 4)—where a dispersive band of mixed dipolar–quadrupolar fluctuations with large spectral weight emerges just above a dipolar ordered ground state. This excitation arises from anisotropic exchange interactions that hybridize overlapping modes carrying fundamentally different quantum numbers. A generalization of spin–wave theory to local SU(3) degrees of freedom5 accounts for all details of the low-energy dynamical response of FeI2, without going beyond quadratic order. Our work highlights that quantum excitations without classical counterparts can be realized, even in the presence of fully developed magnetic order.