Femtosecond Laser pulses push Spintronics and Magnonics to the limit

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Artistic representation of coherent control of femtosecond nanomagnons. Credit: Image courtesy of Radboud University

Artistic representation of coherent control of femtosecond nanomagnons. Credit: Image courtesy of Radboud University

Scientists have achieved the ultimate speed limit of the control of spins in a solid state magnetic material. The rise of the digital information era posed a daunting challenge to develop ever faster and smaller devices for data storage and processing. An approach which relies on the magnetic moment of electrons (i.e. the spin) rather than the charge, has recently turned into major research fields, called spintronics and magnonics.

The researchers were able to induce spin oscillations of the intrinsically highest frequency by using femtosecond laser pulses (1 fs = 10-15 sec). Furthermore, they demonstrated a complete and arbitrary manipulation of the phase and the amplitude of these magnetic oscillations – also called magnons. The length-scale of these magnons is on the order of 1 nanometre.

These results pave the way to the unprecedented frequency range of 20 THz for magnetic recording devices, which can be employed also at the nanometer scale.

The practical implementation of other schemes of magnetic control, based on the use of electric currents, is hampered by a significant heating which requires cooling systems. It is thus important to underline that the concept in the current publication does not involve any heating. This makes the study appealing from the point of view of future applications. However, the possibility to monitor the evolution of a magnet on such short time- and length- scales simultaneously is a major breakthrough also in terms of fundamental science. A new regime, defined by Dr. Bossini as femto-nanomagnonics, has been disclosed. http://www.alphagalileo.org/ViewItem.aspx?ItemId=160715&CultureCode=en