Halperin-Saslow modes as the origin of the low temperature anomaly in NiGa2S4
Abstract
The absence of magnetic long range order in the triangular lattice spin-1 antiferromagnet NiGa2S4 has prompted the search for a novel quantum ground state. In particular, several experiments suggest the presence of a linearly dispersing mode despite no long-range magnetic order. We show that the anomalous low temperature properties of NiGa2S4$ can naturally be explained by the formulation developed by Halperin and Saslow where the linearly dispersing Halperin-Saslow mode may exist in the background of frozen spin moments and zero net magnetization. We provide highly non-trivial consistency checks on the existing experimental data and suggest future experiments that can further confirm the existence of the Halperin-Saslow mode. Our results place strong constraints on any microscopic theory of this material.
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