We study experimentally the influence of the laser-induced temperature gradient on the parameters of propagating magnetostatic surface waves in thin film of the ferromagnetic metallic alloy Galfenol Fe0.81Ga0.19. The material has a pronounced magnetocrystalline anisotropy and exhibits the long-distance propagation of magnetostatic surface waves excited with femtosecond laser pulses. The excitation pulse heats up the sample locally, what leads to the spatial-temporal change of magnetization and anisotropy parameters of the film, and thus excites the magnetostatic surface waves. We show experimentally that the spectrum of the excited waves narrows as they propagate in such a gradient medium. By changing the orientation of external magnetic field with respect to anisotropy axes of the sample, we control whether the low- or high-frequency part of the spin waves spectrum is suppressed.
The rate and pathways of relaxation of a magnetic medium to its equilibrium following excitation with intense and short laser pulses are the key ingredients of ultrafast optical control of spins. Here we study experimentally the evolution of the magnetization and magnetic anisotropy of thin films of a ferromagnetic metal galfenol (Fe0.81Ga0.19) resulting from excitation with a femtosecond laser pulse. From the temporal evolution of the hysteresis loops we deduce that the magnetization MS and magnetic anisotropy parameters K recover within a nanosecond, and the ratio between K and MS satisfies the thermal equilibrium's power law in the whole time range spanning from a few picoseconds to 3 nanoseconds. We further use the experimentally obtained relaxation times of MS and K to analyze the laser-induced precession and demonstrate how they contribute to its frequency evolution at the nanosecond timescale.
Development of a control unit and power source for an implantable assisted circulation pump is discussed. The device for left ventricle assistance was developed in the Shumakov Federal pro vides a basis for a safe portable pacemaker meeting the requirements of extracorporeal circulation systems (ECS). The aspects of engineering, structural, and software support of the system are discussed. An implanted axial pump (IAP) of the ECS for artificial left cardiac ventricle (ALCV) is considered.
In this work, we tackle the problem of the spatially selective optical excitation of spin dynamics in structures with multiple magnetic layers. The 120 fs circularly polarized laser pulses were used to launch magnetization precession in an all-dielectric magneto-photonic crystals (MPC) formed by magnetic layers sandwiched between and inside two magnetic Bragg mirrors. Optical pump-probe experiments reveal magnetization precession triggered via ultrafast inverse Faraday effect with an amplitude strongly dependent on the pump central wavelength: maxima of the amplitude are achieved for the wavelength tuned at the cavity resonance and at the edge of the photonic bandgap. The optical impact on the spins caused by the inverse Faraday effect and spectrum of this effect are found to correlate mostly to the direct Faraday effect. We show that even though the pump laser pulses propagate along the whole structure tuning their wavelength allows localization of a larger spin precession either in the cavity layer or in the Bragg mirror layers selectively. The results pave the way to the ultrafast optical control of magnetization dynamics at a sub-wavelength scale that is vital for modern magneto-photonics and magnonics.
We present an experimental study of ultrafast optical excitation of magnetostatic surface spin wave (MSSW) packets and their spectral properties in thin films of pure iron. As the packets leave the excitation area and propagate in space, their spectra evolve non-trivially. Particularly, low or high frequency components are suppressed at the border of the excitation area depending on the orientation of the external magnetic field with respect to the magnetocrystalline anisotropy axes of the film. The effect is ascribed to the ultrafast local heating of the film. Furthermore, the time resolution of the implemented all-optical technique allows us to extract the chirp of the MSSW packet in the time domain via wavelet analysis. The chirp is a result of the group velocity dispersion of the MSSW and, thus, is controlled by the film's magnetic parameters, magnetization and anisotropy, and external field orientation. The demonstrated tunable modulation of MSSW wave packets with femtosecond laser pulses may find application in future magnonic-photonic hybrid devices for wave-based data processing.
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