Light-induced Faraday effect originates from antisymmetric third-order susceptibility due to dynamical Kleinman symmetry breakdown, shown in an sp tight-binding model without requiring magnetization.
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2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
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cond-mat.mtrl-sci 2years
2026 2verdicts
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Under modest tensile strain, SrTiO3 develops a polar vibrational mode at finite wavevector, indicating a textured polar phase on nanometer scales rather than uniform ferroelectric order.
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Light-induced Faraday effect from dynamical breakdown of Kleinman symmetry
Light-induced Faraday effect originates from antisymmetric third-order susceptibility due to dynamical Kleinman symmetry breakdown, shown in an sp tight-binding model without requiring magnetization.
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A textured polar phase in strained SrTiO3
Under modest tensile strain, SrTiO3 develops a polar vibrational mode at finite wavevector, indicating a textured polar phase on nanometer scales rather than uniform ferroelectric order.