Ultrafast demagnetization measurements using extreme ultraviolet light: Comparison of electronic and magnetic contributions

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Abstract

Ultrashort pulses of extreme ultraviolet light from high-harmonic generation are a new tool for probing coupled charge, spin, and phonon dynamics with element specificity, attosecond pump-probe synchronization, and time resolution of a few femtoseconds in a tabletop apparatus. In this paper, we address an important question in magneto-optics that has implications for understanding magnetism on the fastest time scales: Is the signal from the transverse magneto-optical Kerr effect at the M 2,3 edges of a magnetic material purely magnetic or is it perturbed by nonmagnetic artifacts? Our measurements demonstrate conclusively that transverse magneto-optical Kerr measurements at the M 2,3 edges sensitively probe the magnetic state, with almost negligible contributions from the transient variation of the refractive index by the nonequilibrium hot-electron distribution. In addition, we compare pump-probe demagnetization dynamics measured by both high harmonics and conventional visible-wavelength magneto-optics and find that the measured demagnetization times are in agreement.

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La-O-Vorakiat, C., Turgut, E., Teale, C. A., Kapteyn, H. C., Murnane, M. M., Mathias, S., … Silva, T. J. (2012). Ultrafast demagnetization measurements using extreme ultraviolet light: Comparison of electronic and magnetic contributions. Physical Review X, 2(1). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.2.011005

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