Abstract
Despite decades of intense research, the enigmatic pseudo-gap (PG) phase of superconducting cuprates remains unsolved. In the last 15 years, various symmetry breaking states were discovered in the PG phase, including an intra-unit cell (IUC) magnetism, which preserves the lattice translational (LT) symmetry but breaks the time-reversal and parity symmetries, and an additional incipient charge density wave breaking the LT symmetry. However, none of these states can (alone) account for the partial gapping of the Fermi surface. Here we report a hidden LT-breaking magnetism using polarized neutron diffraction. Our measurements reveal magnetic correlations, in two different underdoped YBa2Cu3O6.6 single crystals that set in at the PG onset temperature with (i) a planar propagation wave vector (π, 0) ≡ (0, π), yielding a doubling or quadrupling of the magnetic unit cell and (ii) magnetic moments mainly pointing perpendicular to the CuO2 layers. The LT-breaking magnetism is at short-range suggesting the formation of clusters of 5–6 unit cells. Together with the previously reported IUC magnetism, it yields a hidden magnetic texture of the CuO2 unit cells hosting loop currents, forming large supercells that may be helpful for elucidating the PG puzzle.
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Introduction
The phase diagram of high temperature cuprate superconductors is dominated by the mysterious PG phase overhanging the unconventional d-wave superconducting (SC) state1,2,3. A fundamental property of the PG is a partially gapped electronic spectrum whose origin has been under hot debate and deep experimental and theoretical scrutiny since its discovery4. A wide set of experimental results report the onset of broken discrete Ising (Z2) symmetries at the same characteristic temperature T* where the electronic PG opens5. The discrete broken symmetries are: lattice rotation (C4)6,7,8, interpreted in terms of an (Ising) nematic order, inversion or parity as shown by second harmonic generation measurements9 and time-reversal as reported by polarized neutron diffraction10,11,12,13,14,15,16, circularly polarized angle resolved photo-emission spectroscopy17 and muon spin spectroscopy18. The time-reversal and parity symmetry breakings are usually associated with a translationally invariant or Intra-Unit Cell magnetism (q = 0 or IUC-magnetism), either carried by loop currents (LC)19,20,21,22,23 or by magnetic multipoles24,25,26. The detection of such objects is extremely challenging owing to the weakness of the corresponding signal, which is further partly hidden by the structural response during a scattering experiment10,11,12,13,14,15,16. However, to date, the reported IUC pattern preserves the LT symmetry. A large Fermi surface is thus conserved and none of the IUC related broken discrete symmetries can induce the needed electronic gap1,27. Meanwhile, the electron pockets observed at high magnetic field and low temperature in the PG phase2,3 must originate from a phase breaking LT symmetry.
In the same region of the phase diagram, at lower temperature than T*, an incipient charge density wave (CDW) that competes with SC and breaks the LT and C4 symmetries was extensively reported1,2. The short-range CDW induces a lattice superstructure leading to a uni/bi-axial response at incommensurate planar wave-vectors in reciprocal space qCDW = (0, ±ϵ) and/or (±ϵ, 0), with ϵ ~ 0.3 in reduced lattice units (r. l. u) in YBa2Cu3O6+x (YBCO). At zero magnetic field, CDW modulations are quasi-2D and weaken when entering the SC state at temperatures T < Tc. Upon applying either an external magnetic field along the c-axis28 or a uni-axial pressure along the a-axis29, 3D CDW correlations develop with a uni-axial character along the b-axis (direction of the underlying CuO chains in YBCO, see Fig. 1a). Although the incipient CDW breaks LT symmetry, its onset temperature TCDW remains well below T*, deep into the PG phase, and can thus not be alone at the origin of the opening of the electronic gap. This conclusion is further reinforced by recent Hall transport measurements30.
To describe this manifold problem and reconcile the seemingly unrelated discrete symmetry breakings and occurrence of the electronic gap, new theoretical approaches invoking the concept of intertwined states were elaborated1. Apart from the IUC magnetism arising from LC order, other unconventional magnetic correlations involving alternative LT-symmetry breaking charge current patterns have been discussed in cuprates. For instance, starting from a collinear homogeneous antiferromagnetic (AF) Mott insulator (zero hole-doping, localized \(S=\frac{1}{2}\) spins on Cu atoms) with a magnetic response at the planar wave-vector qAF = (0.5,0.5), hole-doping was proposed to destabilize the AF state towards a spin-liquid state characterized by a staggered flux phase (π-flux)31, also described as a d-wave charge density wave (DDW) state32. This state exhibits staggered LC, yielding an orbital magnetic response at qDDW = qAF. Note, however, that the Cu-spin moments are locked within the CuO2 layers (planar anisotropy)33, whereas the LC orbital moments are expected to be perpendicular to the CuO2 layers. Despite several attempts, neutron diffraction measurements failed to prove the existence of such a phase14,34.
Here, using polarized neutron diffraction, we report magnetic correlations at commensurate planar q-wave-vectors (q, 0) ≡ (0, q) with q = 1/2 that correspond to a lattice symmetry breaking and appear to be tightly bound to the PG physics in the underdoped YBa2Cu3O6.6 material. This magnetim is at short-range suggesting the formation of clusters of 5-6 unit cells that can be associated with a hidden magnetic texture emerging out the CuO2 unit cells hosting loop currents.
Results
We performed elastic polarized neutron diffraction (PND) experiments on three Triple Axis Spectrometers (TAS): 4F1 at Orphée reactor-Saclay, IN22 and Thales at Institut Laue-Langevin-Grenoble, operating at different wavelengths and using different neutron polarization setups (see Methods). The TAS were equipped with longitudinal XYZ polarization analysis (XYZ-PA, see Methods), a powerful technique to selectively probe and disentangle the magnetic response from the nuclear one with no assumptions on the background. The samples were studied either in (1,0,0)/(0,0,1) or (1,0,0)/(0,1,0) scattering planes such as wave-vectors of the form (H, 0, L) or (H, K, 0) in momentum space were accessible. In the following, the wave-vectors are indexed in reduced lattice units (r.l.u.) of \((\frac{2\pi }{a},\frac{2\pi }{b},\frac{2\pi }{c})\) where a, b and c stand for the lattice parameters of the sample (See Methods and Supplementary Note 1 for details). We carried out our investigations in two different YBa2Cu3O6+x samples: a twinned YBCO-t sample and a detwinned sample YBCO-d10,15, with close compositions (nominal x = 0.6) and with similar hole-doping (p ~ 0.11) and critical temperatures (Tc = 61 and 63 K) but with different oxygen ordering the CuO chains.
Momentum dependence
Using XYZ-PA, we uncovered a magnetic peak centered at Q = (0.5,0,0.5) in YBCO-t, as shown by the H-scan along (H,0,0.5) (Fig. 1b). The magnetic signal can be described by a Gaussian profile, broader than the instrumental resolution. After deconvolution, its intrinsic linewidth—half width at half maximum (HWHM)—is ΔH = 0.03 ± 0.01 r.l.u. This corresponds to a finite correlation length along the a-axis of \({\xi }_{a}=\frac{a}{2\pi {{\Delta }}}\) ≃ 20 ± 6Å, corresponding to ~5 planar unit-cells. A rocking scan across (0.5,0,0.5) allowed us to confirm the intrinsic origin of the magnetic signal, excluding extrinsic scattering due to powder lines from a parasitic magnetic phase (see Supplementary Note 2 and Supplementary Fig. 1).
The L-scan of Fig. 1c was performed in the non-spin-flip NSFX channel and shows a nuclear scattering at Q-positions of the form (0.5, 0, L) with L integer. This peculiar structure factor is due to the characteristic Ortho-II structure of the CuO chains, running parallel to the b-axis as represented in Fig. 1a35. The same scan along the (0.5, 0, L) direction, obtained using XYZ-PA, shows a broad magnetic scattering, at odds with the Ortho-II oxygen ordering in the CuO chains (Fig. 1d). This rules out the chains as the host of the new-found magnetic signal rather pointing to the CuO2 planes (Fig. 1a) as the origin of the magnetic response, breaking the LT invariance (q = 1/2). The diffuse magnetic signal along the (0.5, 0, L) trajectory of Fig. 1d further underlines the absence of magnetic correlations along the c-axis. For both scans along H and L, raw data for YBCO-t are shown in Supplementary Fig. 2.
To ascertain the existence of the q = 1/2 magnetism and unravel scattering from CuO chains and CuO2 planes, we carried out further PND investigations in the detwinned sample, YBCO-d. Fig. 2 shows the PND results along several directions in momentum space defined in Fig. 2f. (Raw data scans for YBCO-d are shown in Supplementary Figs. 3 and 4). Figure 2a depicts a scan along the H direction in the spin-flip SFX channel revealing the occurrence of a magnetic peak, centered at (0.5,0,0) ≡ (π, 0). As in YBCO-t, the signal is at short-range with ΔH = 0.025 ± 0.01 r.l.u. given by the fit with a Gaussian profile. This corresponds to \({\xi }_{a}=\frac{a}{2\pi {{\Delta }}}\) ≃ 24 ± 4Å, which represents correlations over ~ 6 unit cells, consistent with the value deduced in the YBCO-t sample. The same scan in the NSFX channel Fig. 2b reveals two nuclear peaks at H = 0.385 and 0.625, inherent to the Ortho-VIII oxygen ordering of the CuO chains35 in that YBCO-d sample36, which leads to nuclear satellites at qCh = (H ± 0.125, 0, 0) where no magnetic signal occurs (Fig. 2a). The absence of magnetic scattering at the characteristic qCh positions confirms the CuO2 planes as the origin of the magnetic response at H = 0.5.
We further performed a survey of the momentum dependence of the magnetic signal in the detwinned YBCO-d sample, where a and b directions are clearly identified, to determine its planar structure factor. Figure 2c shows the resulting magnetic intensity along the (H, 0.5, 0) trajectory, as given by XYZ-PA. The H-scan reveals as well a magnetic peak centered at (0, 0.5, 0) ≡ (0, π) while no magnetic intensity is seen at qAF/DDW = (0.5, 0.5, 0) ≡ (π, π). The observed magnetic pattern is then found along both CuO-bond directions with actually a very similar intensity. This indicates a short-range either uni-axial (with domains) or bi-axial magnetism leading to a local doubling or quadrupling (2 × 2) of the unit cell, never reported previously. Additional measurements with the sample aligned within [a, c] plane allowed us to elucidate the L-dependence of the out-of-plane magnetic correlations. Figure 2d shows an L-scan across (0.5, 0, 0) in the SFX channel highlighting a broad magnetic peak, centered at (0.5, 0, 0). The extracted correlation length (from a fit by a Gaussian function) ξc ≃ 13 ± 1 Å is very short and does not exceed the size of ~ 1 unit-cell in the c direction (ΔL = 0.14 ± 0.01 r.l.u. HWHM after deconvolution).
We further investigated the structure factor of the (2 × 2) magnetism through XYZ-PA measurements at additional equivalent Q-points in other Brillouin zones. The results are reported in Fig. 2e and show the occurence of magnetic intensity at wavevectors of the form (0.5,1,0) as well, whereas the limited statistics at (1.5,0,0) prevents from drawing a clear conclusion about the existence of a magnetic response and requires further investigations.
Temperature dependence
To determine the onset temperature of the short-range q = 1/2 magnetism, we measured the temperature dependence of the signal at (0.5, 0, 0) in YBCO-d, both in the SFX channel and using XYZ-PA. Figure 3a shows the total scattered magnetic intensity that splits into a leading out-of-plane magnetic component Ic displaying an order parameter-like temperature dependence in Fig. 3b and a subsidiary in-plane magnetic component, Ib, which at variance, remains almost constant as a function of temperature Fig. 3c. Our measurements show that the onset temperature for the dominating Ic magnetic component is T* ~ 235 K. The temperature dependence of the magnetic signal at (0, 0.5, 0) as deduced from XYZ − PA analysis reproduces the same Ising-like orientation of the magnetic moment, with a similar amplitude as at (0.5, 0, 0): a major Ic, out-of-plane component, arises at T* ~ 235K following the same order parameter-like temperature dependence (Supplementary Fig. 5). The H-scans across (0.5, 0, 0) on Fig. 3d, e show the drop of the magnetic signal from 10 to 300 K, respectively. The data correspond to measurements in the SFX,Y,Z channels. Note in Fig. 3d that the magnetic signal in the X channel corresponds to six times the statistical noise related to the background. However, using unpolarized neutron diffraction, the magnetic scan would remain totally hidden by the large and modulated nuclear scattering from the chains.
Further, the temperature dependence of the out-of-plane magnetic response, Ic, matches the one reported for the IUC-magnetism (Supplementary Fig. 5): Ic sets-in at T ≃ T*, the PG onset temperature as reported from resistivity measurements37, and of T ~ Tmag, the onset temperature for the q = 0 magnetic order10,14, suggesting a common origin of both the IUC magnetic order and the short-range q = 1/2 magnetism reported here. On general grounds, because it breaks LT, the q = 1/2 magnetism could be an alternative candidate for the opening of the PG state, potentially solving a long-standing question. Along the same line of thought, it could as well play a significant role in the electron pockets formation2 yielding a Fermi surface reconstruction known to be exclusively occurring within the PG state.
Discussion
Our comprehensive set of PND data gives a coherent picture for the q = 1/2 magnetism occuring at commensurate (π, 0) ≡ (0, π) in high-Tc superconducting YBa2Cu3O6.6. First, the location of the observed magnetism is clearly distinct from qAF ≡ (π, π). This rules out various reported magnetic patterns, namely the antiferromagnetic spin order, π-flux or DDW phases31,32, all phases located at the commensurate (π, π) position, or the Spin Density Wave (SDW) located at incommensurate position qSDW = qAF ± (δ, 0) or (0, δ) with δ ~ 0.1 revealed by spin fluctuations induced by zinc impurity38. Second, the occurence of both propagation vectors q1 = (0.5, 0, 0) and q2 = (0, 0.5, 0) suggests a biaxial ordering with a double-q antiferromagnetic structure, corresponding to a quadrupling (2 × 2) of the unit cell. However, a uniaxial ordering, doubling the unit cell along each direction of the CuO bonds, can as well account for the observed patterns, assuming equi-populated magnetic domains along each direction. This can happen even in the detwinned sample if the magnetic domains do not depend on the underlying orthorhombic structure.
We considered several models that can reproduce the scattering selection rules for the q = 1/2 magnetism. Fig. 4 shows three different magnetic patterns corresponding to 2 × 2 larger unit cells and involving either spin or orbital magnetic moments at one Cu-site over 2 (Fig. 4a) with an antiferromagnetic coupling along the unit cell diagonal, a loop currents model (Fig. 4b) corresponding to the smallest possible domain with a period of 2Pa (P = 1, a is the lattice parameter) of LC supercell recently proposed to break the lattice translation symmetry27 and where the anapole undergoes a 90∘ rotation at each adjacent unit cell5, or a staggered loop currents phase with currents running along the diagonals of the CuO2 planes (Fig. 4c). All these patterns nicely agree with the measured structure factor (Supplementary Note 3). However, the magnetic moment predominantly observed perpendicular to the CuO2 layers does not support an interpretation in terms of Cu spins that are locked within the CuO2 planes owing to their strong XY spin anisotropy33. It instead favors loop current patterns as the ones shown in Fig. 4b, c where, in principle, orbital moments should be perpendicular to the planes where currents are confined19.
Following all these observations, one can build real space pictures based on loop currents to account for both the IUC magnetism and the hidden q = 1/2 magnetism. As originally proposed in ref. 39,40, LCs are conveniently characterized by four degenerate states that can be represented by anapole moments pointing along the four planar unit cell diagonals as displayed in Fig. 5a where each color corresponds to a given anapole orientation. Using these four basic states, one can build an anapole-vortex-like phase represented in Fig. 5b that also describes the q = 1/2 magnetism. It is similar to Fig. 4b but now with anapoles located on the Cu-sites27. The pattern is both chiral and parity-breaking, and therefore of mm2 symmetry as it has been recently reported from photogalvanic experiments41. The amplitude of the total magnetic scattering has been estimated in absolute units after calibration by the intensity of the reference (1,0,0) nuclear Bragg peak. This magnetic intensity is weak and represents only ~0.3 ± 0.1 mbarn once integrated in momentum space, which is about 10-15 times lower than the one reported for the long-range ordered (q = 0) IUC-magnetism at the (1,0,0) position10,12,14,15. This explains why the magnetic signal remained hidden in previous experiments.
A natural question is then what can be the interplay between both LC phases with distinct propagation wave-vectors, q = 0 and q = 1/2 ? First, the short-range nature of the observed correlations implies 2 × 2 LC islands of only about ~20–25 Å. This therefore precludes a homogeneous distribution of magnetic moments with 2 × 2 correlations superimposed on IUC magnetism that respect LT. Inhomogeneous pictures in real space should be considered instead, revealing a hidden anapolar or magnetic texture. How can a unifom LC order coexist with a modulated one at short-range? This can be accounted for by locating the short-range modulated phase at the domains walls between the long-range uniform (q = 0) domains. Along the same line of thought and by analogy with the electronic liquid crystals where smectic modulations coexist with an IUC nematicity42, one can speculate about the coexistence of a “smectic” short range (q = 1/2) 2 × 2 LC magnetism with a “nematic” (q = 0) longer range magnetism (ferro-anapolar).
Let us first remind that the neutron intensity (I) is proportional to the number of magnetic sites (N) times the square of the magnetic moment, m: I ∝ Nm2. To give the order of magnitude, a magnetic intensity of ~ 0.3 mbarn would correspond to an estimate of the magnetic moment per loop current triangle of mtr ~ 0.025 μB (see supplementary note 3) under the assumption that the pattern of Fig. 5b has a homogeneous distribution of moments (i.e. where all unit cells contribute to the magnetic signal). However, as this assumption is not consistent with the data (short-range magnetism), it yields instead a picture of finite clusters with larger magnetic moments. According to the inhomogeneous picture of coexisting orders, the observed amplitudes of the q = 1/2 magnetism (located at the boundaries separating larger q = 0 domains) would determine the volume fraction of both magnetic patterns within the crystal. In contrast to the homogeneous picture, the 10–15 times weaker intensity of the q = 1/2 magnetism instead implies that 10–15 less sites belongs to the 2 × 2 LC clusters assuming the same magnetic moment in each unit cell as the one extracted from the IUC magnetism10,12,14.
Real space pictures can be built following these requirements. As an example, Fig. 5c shows a pattern of anapoles over 20 × 20 unit cells that represents such a topological arrangement of anapoles (and consequently related loop currents and orbital magnetic moments). Its calculated structure factor matches the observations of the short-range magnetism at both (0.5,0,0) and (0,0.5,0) and longer range IUC magnetism. This picture can be extended to a larger number of unit cells (for instance with more than one 2 × 2 LC cluster) with only two requirements: (i) the clusters should be isolated and (ii) should represent in total about a tenth of the unit cells. The longer range uniform LC domains form the large supercells (of 2P × 2P size) introduced by C.M. Varma27 to account for the Fermi arcs in the PG state. Note however that the P = 1 clusters reported here cannot explain the observed Fermi arcs or magneto-oscillations in this model. LC supercells are predominantly characterized in momentum space by a set of satellites magnetic peaks located at \(\pm \frac{1}{2P}\) from the atomic Bragg peak positions. As far as P ≳ 10, they would be indistinguishable from a single peak at q = 0 due to the limited momentum instrumental resolution of elastic PND experiments5. However, more experiments are necessary to clarify this point. Meanwhile, as far as the site occupation rule holds, 1D arrangements of anapoles either horizontal or vertical as shown in Fig. 5d, e could as well describe the data, with however an additional constraint of equi-populated domains along both directions. Note that the magnetic texture, through the domains size P, can vary noticeably within the crystal leading to a distribution of satellite peaks near the Bragg peaks with similar short-range q = 1/2 magnetism. One can therefore envisage a vast range of possible hidden magnetic textures opened by the observation of short-range q = 1/2 magnetism.
About the interplay of q = 0 and q = 1/2 magnetism, two interesting points should be emphasized. First, the data for the q = 1/2 magnetism shows a larger moment pointing along the c-axis whereas the moments of q = 0 are tilted with respect to the c-axis14,43. It should be stressed that both observations can be consistent as the planar contribution of the magnetic structure factor for both signals depends largely on the specific modeling of the planar component whose origin is still under discussion5. Next, the q = 0 magnetism shows a planar anisotropy of the neutron intensity along both in-plane directions, suggesting a specific arrangement of anapoles within the bilayer15. Instead, the short-range q = 1/2 domains show an isotropic signal. Here again, the LC correlations within the bilayer can be different for both signals because the 2 × 2 LC patterns are mixing the four anapolar directions. Clearly, more experimental data are necessary to settle these questions.
Finally, it is worth recalling that magnetic-sensitive local probes experiments (Nuclear Magnetic Resonance and Muon Spin Rotation) do not observe the expected static local magnetic fields of the magnetism reported by elastic PND measurements5,44. Instead, a fluctuating magnetic response in the PG state has been reported by Muon spectroscopy18. This suggests a magnetic texture slowly fluctuating at a ~10 ns time scale, encompassing the q = 0 IUC magnetic response and the short-range q = 1/2 magnetism. Both appear static in PND owing to the instrumental energy resolution of ~0.1 meV. The q = 1/2 magnetic response and the previously reported q = 0 signal together are related to a magnetic structure factor of a complex hidden magnetic texture (with large supercells of length scale 2P and a magnetic moment of ~0.1 μB in each unit cell). We hope the present work would motivate further experimental investigations in other cuprate families and other hole-doping levels as well as theoretical investigations to understand the role of the hidden magnetic texture in the phase diagram of high-Tc superconducting cuprates.
Methods
Samples
The polarized neutron diffraction study was performed on two different samples of same nominal composition YBa2Cu3O6.6 although they exhibit different oxygen ordering within the CuO chains. The twinned sample (YBCO-t) (Tc = 61 K and hole-doping p = 0.107) is the same as the one used in ref. 10 with an Ortho-II oxygen ordering. It has a mass of ≈ 10 g and a mosaic spread of 1.5∘, determined by performing rocking curves about the nuclear Bragg peaks. The twin-free sample (YBCO-d) has been obtained by methods described in ref. 36 (Tc = 63 K and hole-doping p = 0.115). It consists of co-mounted single crystal plates of about (20 × 20 mm2) and exhibits an Ortho-VIII oxygen ordering. The total sample mass is ~2g and the measured mosaic spread is 2∘. We used pseudo-tetragonal notations for the twinned sample, with a = b = 3.85 Å and c = 11.75 Å. The lattice parameters of the twin-free sample are a = 3.82 Å, b = 3.87 Å and c = 11.75 Å.
Polarized neutron diffraction (PND)
The polarized neutron diffraction experiments were carried out on on three distinct triple axis spectrometers (TAS): 4F1, IN22 and Thales: the TAS 4F1 (Orphée reactor, Saclay) and the IN22 and Thales TAS (Institut Laue Langevin, Grenoble), which are described in more details in the Supplementary Note 1. These instruments are equipped with distinct neutron polarization set-ups and were operating with three distinct neutron wavelengths, to guarantee the reproducibility of the measurements. We used incident neutron wave-vectors of ki = 2.57 Å−1 on 4F1, ki = 2.662 Å−1 on IN22, and ki = 1.5 Å−1 on Thales. As detailed in the figure captions, the samples were either aligned in the (1,0,0)/(0,0,1) or (1,0,0)/(0,1,0) scattering planes, so that wave-vectors Q of the form (H, 0, L) or (H, K, 0) were accessible, respectively. H, K or L-scans were performed across positions of the form (0.5,0,0) or (0,0.5,0) in r.l.u. Both spin-flip (SF) and non-spin-flip (NSF) scans were done in order to crosscheck the absence of nuclear scattering at magnetic positions. Longitudinal XYZ- polarization analysis (XYZ-PA) was performed where, according to conventional notations, X stands for the direction of the neutron polarization parallel to Q, Y and Z polarization directions are both perpendicular to Q. Y is the in-plane orthogonal direction and Z is perpendicular to the scattering plane. On the different neutron instruments, we were using different devices to perform XYZ-PA as:
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MuPAD spherical polarization analysis device with zero magnetic field at the sample chamber on 4F1, for the twin-free YBa2Cu3O6.6 sample. The incoming and outgoing beam polarizations are realized using Bender supermirrors.
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CRYOPAD spherical polarization analysis device with zero magnetic field at the sample chamber on IN22 and Thales for the twin-free YBa2Cu3O6.6 sample. The incoming and outgoing beam polarizations are realized using Heusler crystals.
Data availability
The data obtained on IN22 at ILL are available at https://doi.org/10.5291/ILL-DATA.CRG-2776. The data obtained on Thales at ILL are available at https://doi.org/10.5291/ILL-DATA.4-02-600. The rest of the data that support the findings of this study is available from the corresponding authors upon request.
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Acknowledgements
We thank S. Davis, B. Fauqué, F. Krüger, A. Mesaros, C. Pépin and Y. Zaanen for stimulating discussions. We thank C.M Varma for bringing to us the illuminating perspectives of loop currents supercells. We acknowledge supports from the project NirvAna (contract ANR-14-OHRI-0010) of the French Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) and from the GenLoop project of the LabEX PALM (contract ANR-10-LABX-0039-PALM). We also acknowledge financial support from the Fédération Française de Diffusion Neutronique (2FDN). The open access fee was covered by FILL2030, a European Union project within the European Commission’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation program under grant agreement N∘731096.
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Y.S. and P.B. conceived and supervised the project; D.B., Y.S. and P.B. performed the experiments at LLB Saclay; D.B., V.B. and L.M.-T. performed the experiments at ILL Grenoble; F.B., M.B. and P.S. were the instrument local contacts and ILL. D.B. and P.B. analyzed the neutron data; T.L. prepared and characterized the detwinned single crystals sample; D.B., Y.S. and P.B. wrote the manuscript with further contributions from all authors. All authors contributed to this work, read the manuscript and agree to its contents.
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Bounoua, D., Sidis, Y., Loew, T. et al. Hidden magnetic texture in the pseudogap phase of high-Tc YBa2Cu3O6.6. Commun Phys 5, 268 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1038/s42005-022-01048-1
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s42005-022-01048-1
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