- Boschini, F;
- Minola, M;
- Sutarto, R;
- Schierle, E;
- Bluschke, M;
- Das, S;
- Yang, Y;
- Michiardi, M;
- Shao, YC;
- Feng, X;
- Ono, S;
- Zhong, RD;
- Schneeloch, JA;
- Gu, GD;
- Weschke, E;
- He, F;
- Chuang, YD;
- Keimer, B;
- Damascelli, A;
- Frano, A;
- da Silva Neto, EH
In strongly correlated systems the strength of Coulomb interactions between electrons, relative to their kinetic energy, plays a central role in determining their emergent quantum mechanical phases. We perform resonant x-ray scattering on Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+δ, a prototypical cuprate superconductor, to probe electronic correlations within the CuO2 plane. We discover a dynamic quasi-circular pattern in the x-y scattering plane with a radius that matches the wave vector magnitude of the well-known static charge order. Along with doping- and temperature-dependent measurements, our experiments reveal a picture of charge order competing with superconductivity where short-range domains along x and y can dynamically rotate into any other in-plane direction. This quasi-circular spectrum, a hallmark of Brazovskii-type fluctuations, has immediate consequences to our understanding of rotational and translational symmetry breaking in the cuprates. We discuss how the combination of short- and long-range Coulomb interactions results in an effective non-monotonic potential that may determine the quasi-circular pattern.