Vector pulse magnet
Abstract
The underlying symmetry of the crystal, electronic structure, and magnetic structure manifests itself in the anisotropy of materials' properties, which is a central topic of the present condensed matter research. However, it demands such a considerable effort to fill the explorable space that only a small part has been conquered. We report a vector pulse magnet (VPM) as an alternative experimental technique to control the direction of applied magnetic fields, which may complement the conventional methods with its characteristic features. The VPM combines a conventional pulse magnet and a vector magnet. The VPM can create vector pulsed magnetic fields and swiftly rotating pulsed magnetic fields. As a demonstration, the three-dimensional magnetoresistance measurement of a highly oriented pyrolytic graphite is carried out using the AC four-probe method at 4.5 K and 6 T. The two-dimensional electronic structure of graphite is visualized in the three-dimensional magnetoresistance data. One can uncover the rotational and time-reversal symmetry of materials using a VPM and a variety of measurement techniques.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2504.14896,
title = {Vector pulse magnet},
author = {Kosuke Noda and Kenta Seki and Dilip Bhoi and Kazuyuki Matsubayashi and Kazuto Akiba and Akihiko Ikeda},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2504.14896},
year = {2025}
}
Comments
4 pages, 5 figures