spinonic
Spinonic refers to phenomena or excitations related to spinons, emergent quasiparticles that carry spin 1/2 but no electric charge, arising in certain strongly correlated quantum spin systems. The term is used especially in the context of quantum spin liquids and one-dimensional spin chains where the electron's spin and charge degrees of freedom may fractionalize. In the archetypal one-dimensional spin-1/2 Heisenberg chain, exact solutions reveal a continuum of spinon excitations rather than a single sharp magnon, illustrating spinonic dynamics. In two dimensions, spinons can appear in quantum spin liquids where strong frustration prevents conventional magnetic ordering, often coupled to emergent gauge fields and leading to various theoretical descriptions in terms of fermionic or bosonic spinons.
Experiments seeking spinonic signatures look for continua and fractionalized excitations. Inelastic neutron scattering often shows a
Spinonic physics sits alongside broader concepts of spin liquids and fractionalization, and it contrasts with magnon-based