Litcius/Paper detail

Dynamical Generation of Higher-Order Spin-Orbit Coupling, Topology, and Persistent Spin Texture in Light-Irradiated Altermagnets

Sayed Ali Akbar Ghorashi, Qiang Li

2025Physical Review Letters8 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Altermagnets have been identified as the third category of magnetic materials, exhibiting momentum-dependent spin splitting characterized by even powers of momentum. In this Letter, we show that when subjected to elliptically polarized light, these materials serve as an exemplary framework for the dynamic generation of topological bands featuring higher-order spin-orbit coupling (SOC). Notably, while the generated Zeeman field remains invariant to the particular altermagnetic ordering, the induced higher-order SOCs are related to the magnitude and symmetry of the altermagnetic order. Specifically, we show that an altermagnet exhibiting k^{2n}-spin splitting can generate odd-in-k spin-orbit couplings up to k^{2n-1}. In the limit of circularly polarized light, the only correction is k^{2n-1}, with all lower-order contributions being nullified. Interestingly, light-induced SOCs significantly impact the low-energy band topology, where their Chern numbers change by ΔC=±1, 2, 3 for d, g, i-wave altermagnets. Finally, we find a critical field in which a persistent spin texture is realized, a highly desirable state with predicted infinite spin lifetime. Our Letter showcases light as a powerful, controllable tool for engineering complex and exciting phenomena in altermagnets.

Topics & Concepts

Zeeman effectPhysicsInvariant (physics)Condensed matter physicsSpin (aerodynamics)Texture (cosmology)Coupling (piping)Magnetic fieldSymmetry (geometry)Limit (mathematics)Field (mathematics)Quantum mechanicsTopology (electrical circuits)Symmetry breakingElectronic band structureTheoretical physicsSpin polarizationZero field splittingSpin–orbit interactionChern classPolarization (electrochemistry)T-symmetryPoint reflectionTopological Materials and PhenomenaMagnetic properties of thin filmsAdvanced Condensed Matter Physics