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Ferroaxial density wave from intertwined charge and orbital order in rare-earth tritellurides

  • Birender Singh
  • , Grant McNamara
  • , Kyung Mo Kim
  • , Saif Siddique
  • , Stephen D. Funni
  • , Weizhe Zhang
  • , Xiangpeng Luo
  • , Piyush Sakrikar
  • , Eric M. Kenney
  • , Ratnadwip Singha
  • , Sergey Alekseev
  • , Sayed Ali Akbar Ghorashi
  • , Thomas J. Hicken
  • , Christopher Baines
  • , Hubertus Luetkens
  • , Yiping Wang
  • , Vincent M. Plisson
  • , Michael Geiwitz
  • , Connor A. Occhialini
  • , Riccardo Comin
  • Michael J. Graf, Liuyan Zhao, Jennifer Cano, Rafael M. Fernandes, Judy J. Cha, Leslie M. Schoop, Kenneth S. Burch
  • Boston College
  • Cornell University
  • University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
  • Princeton University
  • Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati
  • Stony Brook University
  • Paul Scherrer Institute
  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • University of Minnesota Twin Cities
  • University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

8 Scopus citations

Abstract

The discovery of the axial amplitude mode—commonly referred to as the Higgs mode—in charge density wave systems, such as rare-earth tritellurides, indicates the presence of a hidden order. A theoretical study proposed that this axial Higgs mode arises from a hidden orbital texture of the charge density wave, which produces a ferroaxial charge order. However, experimental evidence for the specific hidden order has been lacking. Here, we demonstrate a ferroaxial order of electronic origin throughout the rare-earth tritellurides. In ErTe3 and HoTe3, which exhibit two distinct charge density waves with different ordering temperatures, a detailed investigation shows that the high-temperature charge order phase breaks translational, rotational and all vertical as well as diagonal mirror symmetries. Furthermore, this phase produces an axial Higgs mode and an axial electronic gap. By contrast, the low-temperature phase breaks only translational symmetry and gives rise to a scalar Higgs mode. Notably, both phases preserve the space inversion and time-reversal symmetries. These findings are consistent with a ferroaxial phase driven by coupled orbital and charge orders, highlighting the role of Higgs modes in revealing hidden orders in systems with intertwined charge density waves.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1578-1586
Number of pages9
JournalNature Physics
Volume21
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2025

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