TY - JOUR KW - ultrafast magnetization AU - Wenjing You AU - Phoebe Tengdin AU - Cong Chen AU - Xun Shi AU - Dmitriy Zusin AU - Yingchao Zhang AU - Christian Gentry AU - Adam Blonsky AU - Mark Keller AU - Peter Oppeneer AU - Henry Kapteyn AU - Zhensheng Tao AU - Margaret Murnane AB -

By correlating time- and angle-resolved photoemission and time-resolved transverse magneto-optical Kerr effect measurements, both at extreme ultraviolet wavelengths, we uncover the universal nature of the ultrafast photoinduced magnetic phase transition in Ni. This allows us to explain the ultrafast magnetic response of Ni at all laser fluences\textemdashfrom a small reduction of the magnetization at low laser fluences, to complete quenching at high laser fluences. Both probe methods exhibit the same demagnetization and recovery timescales. The spin system absorbs the energy required to proceed through a magnetic phase transition within 20 fs after the peak of the pump pulse. However, the spectroscopic signatures of demagnetization of the material appear only after ≈200 fs and the subsequent recovery of magnetization on timescales ranging from 500 fs to \>70 ps. We also provide evidence of two competing channels with two distinct timescales in the recovery process that suggest the presence of coexisting phases in the material.

BT - Physical Review Letters DA - 2018-08 DO - 10.1103/PhysRevLett.121.077204 N2 -

By correlating time- and angle-resolved photoemission and time-resolved transverse magneto-optical Kerr effect measurements, both at extreme ultraviolet wavelengths, we uncover the universal nature of the ultrafast photoinduced magnetic phase transition in Ni. This allows us to explain the ultrafast magnetic response of Ni at all laser fluences\textemdashfrom a small reduction of the magnetization at low laser fluences, to complete quenching at high laser fluences. Both probe methods exhibit the same demagnetization and recovery timescales. The spin system absorbs the energy required to proceed through a magnetic phase transition within 20 fs after the peak of the pump pulse. However, the spectroscopic signatures of demagnetization of the material appear only after ≈200 fs and the subsequent recovery of magnetization on timescales ranging from 500 fs to \>70 ps. We also provide evidence of two competing channels with two distinct timescales in the recovery process that suggest the presence of coexisting phases in the material.

PY - 2018 T2 - Physical Review Letters TI - Revealing the Nature of the Ultrafast Magnetic Phase Transition in Ni by Correlating Extreme Ultraviolet Magneto-Optic and Photoemission Spectroscopies UR - https://journals.aps.org/prl/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevLett.121.077204 VL - 121 SN - 0031-9007 ER -