The magneto-optical gradient effect in an exchange-biased thin film: Experimental evidence for classical diffraction theory

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Abstract

The magneto-optical gradient effect decorates the boundaries of inplane domains even at perpendicular incidence of light in an optical polarization microscope. For its explanation, the classical magneto-optical diffraction theory was previously used to derive the effect from the same gyrotropic interaction as the Kerr effect. In order to explain the symmetry of the experimentally observed contrast on bulk ferromagnetic crystals, planar as well as perpendicular subsurface gradients in the magnetization had to be assumed. This was particularly needed when the surface magnetizations in neighboring domains pointed headon and a gradient contrast appeared also in conditions of vanishing gyrotropic interaction at the surface. The gradient contrast in such conditions should not appear in very thin films where perpendicular magnetization gradients are not enforced by reduction of magnetostatic energy. Here we present the first experimental confirmation of this expectation, thus closing an experimental gap in verifying the predictions of the diffraction theory. © IOP Publishing Ltd and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft.

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APA

Schäfer, R., Hamann, C., McCord, J., Schultz, L., & Kamberský, V. (2010). The magneto-optical gradient effect in an exchange-biased thin film: Experimental evidence for classical diffraction theory. New Journal of Physics, 12. https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/12/5/053006

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