We report a detailed study of UGe 2 single crystals using infrared reflectivity and spectroscopic ellipsometry. The optical conductivity suggests the presence of a low-frequency interband transition and a narrow freecarrier response with strong frequency dependence of the scattering rate and effective mass. We observe sharp increase in the low-frequency mass and reduction in scattering rate below the upper ferromagnetic transition T C = 53 K indicating the emergence of a heavy fermion state triggered by the ferromagnetic order. The characteristic changes are exhibited most strongly at an energy scale below 12 meV. They recover their unrenormalized value above T C and for Ͼ 40 meV. In contrast no sign of an anomaly is seen at the lower transition temperature of unknown nature, T x ϳ 30 K, observed in transport and thermodynamic experiments. DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.78.172406 PACS number͑s͒: 75.30.Mb, 71.27.ϩa, 78.20.Ϫe The possibility of unconventional superconductivity mediated by ferromagnetic fluctuations has long been a subject of theoretical speculation. 1,2 Interest in this subject has been recently piqued with the discovery of superconductivity coexisting with the ferromagnetic state of UGe 2 under pressure.3 UGe 2 is a strongly anisotropic uniaxial ferromagnet with partially filled 5f electron states. Due to correlations and conduction band-5f hybridization, carrier masses are found to be strongly enhanced 4 ͓͑10-25͒m 0 ͔ although specific-heat coefficients still fall an order of magnitude short of the largest values found in antiferromagnetic uranium-based heavy fermion ͑HF͒ compounds. UGe 2 exhibits a Curie temperature that strongly decreases with increasing pressure from about 53 K at ambient pressure to full suppression around 16 kbar. Superconductivity exists in a pressure region from 10 to 16 kbar, just below the complete suppression of ferromagnetism.3 Although superconductivity and ferromagnetism are usually found to be antagonistic phenomena, the observation fits within the now common scenario of finding superconductivity near the zero-temperature termination of a magnetic phase. In this sense it seemed quite natural to associate the superconductivity with being mediated by the magnetic fluctuations that diverge at a quantum critical point ͑QCP͒ perhaps as in the case of pressure driven superconductivity in the antiferromagnetic HF superconductors. However, the paramagnetic to ferromagnetic transition is strongly first order and is not associated with a peak in the effective electronic mass or superconducting transition temperature. It therefore appears that superconductivity is not directly related to the quantum phase transition connecting the ferromagnetic and paramagnetic states. 5,6 In addition to the main ferromagnetic transition, there appears to be an additional weak first-order transition of more enigmatic origin at lower temperatures ͑for p =0, T x =30 K and for T =0, p x Ϸ 12.5 kbar͒, which has been identified via resistivity, 5,7,8 magnetization, 6 and heat capacity. 7,8 The critical...