English

The Ultrafast Einstein-De Haas Effect

Strongly Correlated Electrons 2019-03-06 v2

Abstract

The original observation of the Einstein-de Haas effect was a landmark experiment in the early history of modern physics that illustrates the relationship between magnetism and angular momentum. Today the effect is still discussed in elementary physics courses to demonstrate that the angular momentum associated with the aligned electron spins in a ferromagnet can be converted to mechanical angular momentum by reversing the direction of magnetisation using an external magnetic field. In recent times, a related problem in magnetism concerns the time-scale over which this angular momentum transfer can occur. It is known experimentally for several metallic ferromagnets that intense photoexcitation leads to a drop in the magnetisation on a time scale shorter than 100 fs, a phenomenon called ultrafast demagnetisation. The microscopic mechanism for this process has been hotly debated, with one key question still unanswered: where does the angular momentum go on these sub-picosecond time scales? Here we show using femtosecond time-resolved x-ray diffraction that a large fraction of the angular momentum lost from the spin system on the laserinduced demagnetisation of ferromagnetic iron is transferred to the lattice on sub-picosecond timescales, manifesting as a transverse strain wave that propagates from the surface into the bulk. By fitting a simple model of the x-ray data to simulations and optical data, we roughly estimate that the angular momentum occurs on a time scale of 200 fs and corresponds to 80% of the angular momentum lost from the spin system. Our results show that interaction with the lattice plays an essential role in the process of ultrafast demagnetisation in this system.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1804.07159,
  title  = {The Ultrafast Einstein-De Haas Effect},
  author = {Christian Dornes and Yves Acremann and Matteo Savoini and Martin Kubli and Martin J. Neugebauer and Elsa Abreu and Lucas Huber and Gabriel Lantz and Carlos A. F. Vaz and Henrik Lemke and Elisabeth M. Bothschafter and Michael Porer and Vincent Esposito and Laurenz Rettig and Michele Buzzi and Aurora Alberca and Yoav William Windsor and Paul Beaud and Urs Staub and Diling Zhu and Sanghoon Song and James M. Glownia and Steven Lee Johnson},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1804.07159},
  year   = {2019}
}

Comments

39 pages, 2 tables, 7 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-23T01:28:44.613Z