Abstract
Universality is a powerful concept that arises from the divergence of a characteristic length scale. For condensed matter systems, this length scale is typically the correlation length, which diverges at critical points separating two different phases. Few-particle systems exhibit a simpler form of universality when the $s$-wave scattering length diverges. A prominent example of universal phenomena is the emergence of an infinite tower of three-body bound states obeying discrete scale invariance, known as the Efimov effect, which has been subject to extensive research in chemical, atomic, nuclear and particle physics. In principle, these universal phenomena can also emerge in the excitation spectrum of condensed matter systems, such as quantum magnets~[Y. Nishida, Y. Kato, and C. Batista, Nat. Phys. 9, 93 (2013)]. However, the limited tunability of the effective inter-particle interaction relative to the kinetic energy has precluded so far their observation. Here we demonstrate that a high degree of magnetic-field-induced tunability can also be achieved in quantum magnets with strong spin-orbit coupling: a two-magnon resonance condition can be achieved in Yb$_2$Ti$_2$O$_7$ with a field of $\sim$ 13~T along the [110] direction, which leads to the formation of Efimov states in the three-magnon spectrum of this material. Raman scattering experiments can reveal the field-induced two-magnon resonance, as well as the Efimov three-magnon bound states that emerge near the resonance condition.
Highlights
The simplest example of universality arises in the vicinity of scattering resonances of few-body systems, where the lowenergy physics is characterized solely by the s-wave scattering length a
The tunability of interparticle interactions is highly desired for their realization, which has only been achieved for atomic gases
The low-energy physics of Yb2Ti2O7 is described by bosons in continuous space with anisotropic mass tensor
Summary
The simplest example of universality arises in the vicinity of scattering resonances of few-body systems, where the lowenergy physics is characterized solely by the s-wave scattering length a. The main obstacle for observing universal behavior in the vicinity of scattering resonances in condensed matter systems is their limited tunability in comparison to ultracold atoms, whose Feshbach resonances provide a way to vary a by applying a uniform magnetic field [9]. Among multiple uses, this tool has served to study the crossover between Bose-Einstein condensates (BECs) of fermionic molecules and the BCS regime of weakly interacting fermion pairs in Fermi clouds [10,11,12,13,14,15,16].
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