Modern Magnetic Systems
Note: This department has relocated.

Visualizing nanoscale spin waves using MAXYMUS

2019

Article

mms


Magnonics research, i.e. the manipulation of spin waves for information processing, is a topic of intense research interest in the past years. FMR, BLS and MOKE measurements lead to tremendous success and advancement of the field. However, these methods are limited in their spatial resolution. X-ray microscopy opens up a way to push to spatial resolutions below 100 nm. Here, we discuss the methodology of STXM for pump-probe data acquisition with single photon counting and arbitrary excitation patterns. Furthermore, we showcase these capabilities using two magnonic crystals as examples: an antidot lattice and a Fibonacci quasicrystal.

Author(s): Gräfe, J. and Weigand, M. and Van Waeyenberge, B. and Gangwar, A. and Groß, F. and Lisiecki, F. and Rychly, J. and Stoll, H. and Träger, N. and Förster, J. and Stobiecki, F. and Dubowik, J and Klos, H. and Krwaczyk, M. and Back, C. H. and Goering, E. J. and Schütz, G.
Journal: Proceedings of SPIE
Volume: 11090
Pages: 1109025
Year: 2019
Publisher: SPIE

Department(s): Modern Magnetic Systems
Bibtex Type: Article (article)
Paper Type: Journal

Address: Bellingham, Washington
DOI: 10.1117/12.2530326
Language: eng
State: Published

BibTex

@article{escidoc:3167984,
  title = {Visualizing nanoscale spin waves using MAXYMUS},
  author = {Gr{\"a}fe, J. and Weigand, M. and Van Waeyenberge, B. and Gangwar, A. and Groß, F. and Lisiecki, F. and Rychly, J. and Stoll, H. and Tr{\"a}ger, N. and F{\"o}rster, J. and Stobiecki, F. and Dubowik, J and Klos, H. and Krwaczyk, M. and Back, C. H. and Goering, E. J. and Sch{\"u}tz, G.},
  journal = {Proceedings of SPIE},
  volume = {11090},
  pages = {1109025},
  publisher = {SPIE},
  address = {Bellingham, Washington},
  year = {2019},
  doi = {10.1117/12.2530326}
}