Critical slowing down of fermions near a magnetic quantum phase transition
Abstract
A universal phenomenon in phase transitions is critical slowing down (CSD) - systems, after an initial perturbation, take an exceptionally long time to return to equilibrium. It is universally observed in the dynamics of bosonic excitations, like order-parameter collective modes, but it is not generally expected to occur for fermionic excitations because of the half-integer nature of the fermionic spin. Direct observation of CSD in fermionic excitations or quasiparticles would therefore be of fundamental significance. Here, we observe fermionic CSD in the heavy-fermion (HF) compound YbRh2Si2 by terahertz time-domain spectroscopy. HFs are compound objects with a strongly enhanced effective mass, composed of itinerant and localized electronic states. We see that near the quantum phase transition in YbRh2Si2 the build-up of spectral weight of the HFs towards the Kondo temperature TK≈ 25 K is followed by a logarithmic rise of the quasiparticle excitation rate on the heavy-Fermi-liquid side of the quantum phase transition below 10 K. A critical two-band HF liquid theory shows that this is indicative of fermionic CSD. This CSD is a clear indication that the HF quasiparticles experience a breakdown near the quantum phase transition, and the critical exponent of this breakdown introduces a classification of fermionic quantum phase transitions analogous to thermodynamic phase transitions - solution to a long-standing problem.
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