Magnetic properties of layered nanostructures studied by Brillouin light scattering and surface magneto-optic Kerr effect
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2002
abstract:
Brillouin light scattering (BLS) and the surface magneto-optical Kerr effect (SMOKE) provide two well established, non-destructive, optical techniques
whose combined use can yield a great deal of information about magnetism in low-dimensional systems, such as thin films, multilayers, and patterned
structures. The former technique gives information on the high-frequency dynamical properties of a spin system, through detection of long-wavelength
spin waves, while the latter permits easy and direct access to the orientation of the magnetization and to its evolution with the applied magnetic field.
Both techniques can be implemented in situ, to study thin magnetic films and nanostructures in ultrahigh-vacuum conditions. In this article the
main characteristics of both BLS and the SMOKE are discussed and a few experiments carried out at GHOST laboratory, Perugia University, are
presented, with emphasis given to the complementarity of the two techniques.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors:
Gubbiotti, Gianluca
Published in: