Strong
alternating magnetic fields can be used to generate a new type of spin wave
that was previously just theoretically predicted. This was achieved for the
first time by a team of physicists from Martin Luther University
Halle-Wittenberg (MLU). They report on their work in Nature
Communications and provide the first
microscopic images of these spin waves.
The basic idea of spintronics is to use
a special property of electrons—spin—for various electronic applications such
as data and information technology. The spin is the intrinsic angular momentum of electrons that produces
a magnetic moment. Coupling these magnetic moments creates the magnetism that
could ultimately be used in information processing. When these coupled magnetic moments are locally excited by a magnetic field pulse, this dynamic can spread like waves throughout the material.
These are referred to as spin waves or magnons.
A special type of those waves is at the
heart of the work of the physicists from Halle. Normally, the non-linear
excitation of magnons produces integers of the output frequency—1,000 megahertz
becomes 2,000 or 3,000, for example.
“So far, it was only theoretically
predicted that non-linear processes can generate spin waves at higher
half-integer multiples of the excitation frequency,” explains Professor Georg
Woltersdorf from the Institute of Physics at MLU. The team has now been able to
show experimentally which conditions are needed in order to generate these
waves and to control their phase. Phase is the state of the oscillation of a
wave at a certain point and time. “We are the first to to confirm these
excitations in experiments and have even been able to map them,” says
Woltersdorf.
According to the physicist, the waves can be generated in two stable phase states which means this discovery could potentially be used in data processing applications, since computers, for example, also use a binary system.
Source: https://phys.org/news/2022-09-physicists-nanoscale.html
Journal article: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-022-32224-0
Image: Illustration of the experiment.
Credit: Dreyer et al, Nature Communications (CC-BY-SA 4.0)
Source: Physicists
generate new nanoscale spin waves – Scents of Science (myfusimotors.com)
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