On the coexistence of dipolar frustration and criticality in ferromagnets
Abstract
In real magnets the tendency towards ferromagnetism, promoted by exchange coupling, is usually frustrated by dipolar interaction. As a result, the uniformly ordered phase is replaced by modulated (multi-domain) phases, characterized by different order parameters rather than the global magnetization. The transitions occurring within those modulated phases and towards the disordered phase are generally not of second-order type. Nevertheless, strong experimental evidence indicates that a standard critical behavior is recovered when comparatively small fields are applied that stabilize the uniform phase. The resulting power laws are observed with respect to a putative critical point that falls in the portion of the phase diagram occupied by modulated phases, in line with an avoided-criticality scenario. Here we propose a generalization of the scaling hypothesis for ferromagnets, which explains this observation assuming that the dipolar interaction acts as a relevant field, in the sense of renormalization group.
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