Neutron scattering has provided a new and broader view of the twirling collective atomic vibrations in a magnetic crystal.
Phonons—quantized conveyors of sound and heat in solids—are usually visualized as collective vibrations in which atoms simply bounce back and forth, almost as if they were weights on springs. However, atoms can sometimes form “chiral phonons” that twirl and swivel clockwise or counterclockwise, in a way that resembles a coordinated dance [1]. When these circular, chiral motions entrain ionic charge, they generate a magnetic moment, which suggests that there might be a way to control sound and heat using magnetic fields. Until recently, this magnetic dance was primarily observed using optical techniques, granting access to only one corner of the “stage”—the point in the phonon’s momentum space where the momentum is nearly zero. Song Bao of Nanjing University in China and his collaborators have now broadened the view of momentum space by using inelastic neutron spectroscopy.








