| Literature DB >> 22893123 |
Boris Vodungbo1, Julien Gautier, Guillaume Lambert, Anna Barszczak Sardinha, Magali Lozano, Stéphane Sebban, Mathieu Ducousso, Willem Boutu, Kaigong Li, Bharati Tudu, Marina Tortarolo, Ranjit Hawaldar, Renaud Delaunay, Victor López-Flores, Jacek Arabski, Christine Boeglin, Hamed Merdji, Philippe Zeitoun, Jan Lüning.
Abstract
Femtosecond magnetization phenomena have been challenging our understanding for over a decade. Most experiments have relied on infrared femtosecond lasers, limiting the spatial resolution to a few micrometres. With the advent of femtosecond X-ray sources, nanometric resolution can now be reached, which matches key length scales in femtomagnetism such as the travelling length of excited 'hot' electrons on a femtosecond timescale. Here we study laser-induced ultrafast demagnetization in [Co/Pd](30) multilayer films, which, for the first time, achieves a spatial resolution better than 100 nm by using femtosecond soft X-ray pulses. This allows us to follow the femtosecond demagnetization process in a magnetic system consisting of alternating nanometric domains of opposite magnetization. No modification of the magnetic structure is observed, but, in comparison with uniformly magnetized systems of similar composition, we find a significantly faster demagnetization time. We argue that this may be caused by direct transfer of spin angular momentum between neighbouring domains.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22893123 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms2007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919