Abstract
Vortex cores in a superconductor can develop structure and manifest competing orders. In strong magnetic fields, the inter-vortex distance can become short enough for vortex cores to overlap, giving rise to long ranged textures. We show that spin orbit coupling (SOC) can modify the interaction between vortex cores to give rise to undulating competing order fields. We illustrate this using the SO(3) theory of competing orders, wherein superconductivity and a scalar order form a three-component vector field. We consider a spherical surface with a radial magnetic flux that creates two vortices. We find stationary solutions where both vortex cores develop competing order in (a) the same sense, and (b) opposite senses. The latter represents a topologically stable vector configuration analogous to a single skyrmion. Its free energy is lowered when SOC is introduced, making it the ground state beyond a threshold SOC strength. We study this physics on the two dimensional plane using the attractive Hubbard model with Rashba SOC. Here, charge density wave (CDW) order competes with superconductivity. We find phases with long ranged, but spatially modulated, CDW order where the average CDW moment vanishes. In a wide range of parameters, CDW loses its rigidity as SOC lowers the energy cost for domain wall formation. We discuss consequences for systems such as the cuprates where charge order develops without a sharp diffraction peak.
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