Exciton-assisted low-energy magnetic excitations in a photoexcited Mott insulator on a square lattice
ORAL
Abstract
The photoexcitation of a Mott insulator on a square lattice weakens the intensity of both single- and two-magnon excitations as observed in time-resolved resonant-inelastic X-ray scattering and time-resolved Raman scattering, respectively. However, the spectral changes in the low-energy regions below the magnons have not yet been clearly understood. To uncover the nature of the photoinduced low-energy magnetic excitations of the Mott insulator, we numerically investigate the transient magnetic dynamics in a photoexcited half-filled Hubbard model on a square lattice [1]. After turning off a pump pulse tuned for an absorption edge, new magnetic signals clearly emerge well below the magnon energy in both single- and two-magnon excitations. We find that low-energy excitations are predominantly created via excitonic states at the absorption edge. These exciton-assisted magnetic excitations may provide a possible explanation for the low-energy spectral weight in a recent time-resolved two-magnon Raman scattering experiment on insulating YBa2Cu3O6.1.
[1] K. Tsutsui, K. Shinjo, S. Sota and T. Tohyama, arXiv:2207.03141.
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Publication: [1] K. Tsutsui, K. Shinjo, S. Sota and T. Tohyama, arXiv:2207.03141.
Presenters
Takami Tohyama
Department of Applied Physics, Tokyo University of Science, Tokyo 125-8585, Japan, Department of Applied Physics, Tokyo University of Science, Tokyo, Japan, Tokyo University of Science, Katsushika
Authors
Takami Tohyama
Department of Applied Physics, Tokyo University of Science, Tokyo 125-8585, Japan, Department of Applied Physics, Tokyo University of Science, Tokyo, Japan, Tokyo University of Science, Katsushika
Kenji Tustsui
Synchrotron Radiation Research Center, National Institutes for Quantum Science and Technology, Hyogo, Japan
Kazuya Shinjo
Computational Quantum Matter Research Team, RIKEN Center for Emergent Matter Science, Wako, Japan
Shigetoshi Sota
Computational Materials Science Research Team, RIKEN Center for Computational Science, Kobe, Japan