| Literature DB >> 35513406 |
A E Khramova1,2, M Kobecki3, I A Akimov3,4, I V Savochkin5,6, M A Kozhaev5,7, A N Shaposhnikov8, V N Berzhansky8, A K Zvezdin5,7,9, M Bayer3,4, V I Belotelov5,6.
Abstract
Spin waves in magnetic microresonators are at the core of modern magnonics. Here we demonstrate a new method of tunable excitation of different spin wave modes in magnetic microdisks by using a train of laser pulses coming at a repetition rate higher than the decay rate of spin precession. The microdisks are etched in a transparent bismuth iron garnet film and the light pulses influence the spins nonthermally through the inverse Faraday effect. The high repetition rate of the laser stimulus of 10 GHz establishes an interplay between the spin wave resonances in the frequency and momentum domains. As a result, scanning of the focused laser spot near the disk boarder changes interference pattern of the magnons and leads to a resonant dependence of the spin wave amplitude on the external magnetic field. Apart from that, we achieved a switching between volume and surface spin waves by a small variation of the external magnetic field.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35513406 PMCID: PMC9072547 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-07784-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.996
Figure 1Experimental configuration (a) and the spin waves excited in the 300 µm disk (b-e). (Fig. 1(a) was drawn using power point software) (b) Dependence of the spin wave amplitude on the external magnetic field for different positions of the probe beam relative to the pump one. The pump beam is located in the center of the disk (c) Dependence of the spin waves wavelength on the external magnetic field derived from the behavior of the spin wave phase along the x-axis (see inset) measured for different magnetic fields. (d) Experimentally evaluated spin wave dispersion corresponding to backward volume magnetostatic spin waves (BVMSW). (e) Dependence of the spin waves amplitude on the applied magnetic field at four different positions of the pump and probe beams. (f) Simulated distribution of spin wave amplitude at four points indicated in (e). The inset shows these four positions on the microdisk. The pump fluence is 5.2 µJ/cm2.
Figure 3(a) Magnetization precession excited in the 20 μm and 45 μm disks when the pump beam center coincides with the microdisk center. The external magnetic field is 3.01 kOe. (b) Dependence of the magnetization precession amplitude on the magnetic field for the 20 μm and 45 μm disks. The laser pump fluence is 5.2 µJ/cm2.
Figure 2(a) Experimental data of the amplitude of the magnetization precession dependence on the magnetic field for disks of 150, 20 and 10 µm diameter (circles), as well as micromagnet modeling results of the magnetization precession amplitude (dashed lines), the energy density is 5.2 µJ/. (b-e) Spatial distribution of the spin wave amplitude for the 20 μm disk at H = 3.01 kOe (b) (the lower field resonance peak), and at H = 3.14 kOe (c) (the higher field resonance peak), for the 10 µm disk at H = 3.07 kOe (d) (the lower field resonance peak), and at H = 3.12 kOe (e) (the higher field resonance peak).