Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2026 Jun 9;123(23):e2528457123. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2528457123. Epub 2026 Jun 5.
ABSTRACT
Dynamical heterogeneity, in which transitory local fluctuations occur in the conformation and dynamics of constituent particles, is widely hypothesized to be essential to the evolution of supercooled liquids into the structural glass state. Yet its microscopic spatiotemporal phenomenology is challenging to detect directly in molecular glass forming liquids. Because recent theoretical advances predict that corresponding dynamical heterogeneity could occur in supercooled magnetic monopole fluids (Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. 112, 8549 (2015)), we searched for such phenomena in Dy2Ti2O7. By measuring its microsecond-resolved spontaneous magnetization fluctuations [Formula: see text] we detected a sharp bifurcation in monopole noise characteristics below [Formula: see text], with the appearance of powerful spontaneous monopole current bursts. This intense dynamics emerges upon entering the supercooled monopole fluid regime, reaches maximum strength near [Formula: see text] and then collapses along with coincident loss of ergodicity approaching [Formula: see text]. Moreover, when the four-point dynamical susceptibility [Formula: see text] is determined directly from temperature dependence of correlations in [Formula: see text], it evolves as predicted when dynamical heterogeneity is present, revealing its simultaneously and rapidly escalating length and time scales, [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text]. This overall phenomenology greatly expands our empirical knowledge of supercooled monopole fluids and, more generally, demonstrates techniques for detection of the time sequence, magnitude, statistics, and correlations of dynamical heterogeneity, access to which may greatly accelerate fundamental vitrification studies.
PMID:42247567 | DOI:10.1073/pnas.2528457123