- Yin, Jia-Xin;
- Shumiya, Nana;
- Jiang, Yuxiao;
- Zhou, Huibin;
- Macam, Gennevieve;
- Sura, Hano Omar Mohammad;
- Zhang, Songtian S;
- Cheng, Zi-Jia;
- Guguchia, Zurab;
- Li, Yangmu;
- Wang, Qi;
- Litskevich, Maksim;
- Belopolski, Ilya;
- Yang, Xian P;
- Cochran, Tyler A;
- Chang, Guoqing;
- Zhang, Qi;
- Huang, Zhi-Quan;
- Chuang, Feng-Chuan;
- Lin, Hsin;
- Lei, Hechang;
- Andersen, Brian M;
- Wang, Ziqiang;
- Jia, Shuang;
- Hasan, M Zahid
Quantum states induced by single-atomic impurities are at the frontier of physics and material science. While such states have been reported in high-temperature superconductors and dilute magnetic semiconductors, they are unexplored in topological magnets which can feature spin-orbit tunability. Here we use spin-polarized scanning tunneling microscopy/spectroscopy (STM/S) to study the engineered quantum impurity in a topological magnet Co3Sn2S2. We find that each substituted In impurity introduces a striking localized bound state. Our systematic magnetization-polarized probe reveals that this bound state is spin-down polarized, in lock with a negative orbital magnetization. Moreover, the magnetic bound states of neighboring impurities interact to form quantized orbitals, exhibiting an intriguing spin-orbit splitting, analogous to the splitting of the topological fermion line. Our work collectively demonstrates the strong spin-orbit effect of the single-atomic impurity at the quantum level, suggesting that a nonmagnetic impurity can introduce spin-orbit coupled magnetic resonance in topological magnets.