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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.

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