Ultrafast optical modification of exchange interactions in iron oxides

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Abstract

Ultrafast non-thermal manipulation of magnetization by light relies on either indirect coupling of the electric field component of the light with spins via spin-orbit interaction or direct coupling between the magnetic field component and spins. Here we propose a scenario for coupling between the electric field of light and spins via optical modification of the exchange interaction, one of the strongest quantum effects with strength of 10 3 Tesla. We demonstrate that this isotropic opto-magnetic effect, which can be called inverse magneto-refraction, is allowed in a material of any symmetry. Its existence is corroborated by the experimental observation of terahertz emission by spin resonances optically excited in a broad class of iron oxides with a canted spin configuration. From its strength we estimate that a sub-picosecond modification of the exchange interaction by laser pulses with fluence of about 1 mJcm -2 acts as a pulsed effective magnetic field of 0.01 Tesla.

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Mikhaylovskiy, R. V., Hendry, E., Secchi, A., Mentink, J. H., Eckstein, M., Wu, A., … Kimel, A. V. (2015). Ultrafast optical modification of exchange interactions in iron oxides. Nature Communications, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms9190

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