143 research outputs found
Strong-field dipole resonance. I. Limiting analytical cases
We investigate population dynamics in N-level systems driven beyond the
linear regime by a strong external field, which couples to the system through
an operator with nonzero diagonal elements. As concrete example we consider the
case of dipolar molecular systems. We identify limiting cases of the
Hamiltonian leading to wavefunctions that can be written in terms of ordinary
exponentials, and focus on the limits of slowly and rapidly varying fields of
arbitrary strength. For rapidly varying fields we prove for arbitrary that
the population dynamics is independent of the sign of the projection of the
field onto the dipole coupling. In the opposite limit of slowly varying fields
the population of the target level is optimized by a dipole resonance
condition. As a result population transfer is maximized for one sign of the
field and suppressed for the other one, so that a switch based on flopping the
field polarization can be devised. For significant sign dependence the
resonance linewidth with respect to the field strength is small. In the
intermediate regime of moderate field variation, the integral of lowest order
in the coupling can be rewritten as a sum of terms resembling the two limiting
cases, plus correction terms for N>2, so that a less pronounced sign-dependence
still exists.Comment: 34 pages, 1 figur
The role of symmetry on interface states in magnetic tunnel junctions
When an electron tunnels from a metal into the barrier in a magnetic tunnel
junction it has to cross the interface. Deep in the metal the eigenstates for
the electron can be labelled by the point symmetry group of the bulk but around
the interface this symmetry is reduced and one has to use linear combinations
of the bulk states to form the eigenstates labelled by the irreducible
representations of the point symmetry group of the interface. In this way there
can be states localized at the interface which control tunneling. The
conclusions as to which are the dominant tunneling states are different from
that conventionally found.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, accepted in PRB, v2: reference 3 complete
Effect of interface bonding on spin-dependent tunneling from the oxidized Co surface
We demonstrate that the factorization of the tunneling transmission into the
product of two surface transmission functions and a vacuum decay factor allows
one to generalize Julliere's formula and explain the meaning of the ``tunneling
density of states'' in some limiting cases. Using this factorization we
calculate spin-dependent tunneling from clean and oxidized fcc Co surfaces
through vacuum into Al using the principal-layer Green's function approach. We
demonstrate that a monolayer of oxygen on the Co (111) surface creates a
spin-filter effect due to the Co-O bonding which produces an additional
tunneling barrier in the minority-spin channel. This changes the minority-spin
dominated conductance for the clean Co surface into a majority spin dominated
conductance for the oxidized Co surface.Comment: 7 pages, revtex4, 4 embedded eps figure
Fully relativistic calculation of magnetic properties of Fe, Co and Ni adclusters on Ag(100)
We present first principles calculations of the magnetic moments and magnetic
anisotropy energies of small Fe, Co and Ni clusters on top of a Ag(100) surface
as well as the exchange-coupling energy between two single adatoms of Fe or Co
on Ag(100). The calculations are performed fully relativistically using the
embedding technique within the Korringa-Kohn-Rostoker method. The magnetic
anisotropy and the exchange-coupling energies are calculated by means of the
force theorem. In the case of adatoms and dimers of iron and cobalt we obtain
enhanced spin moments and, especially, unusually large orbital moments, while
for nickel our calculations predict a complete absence of magnetism. For larger
clusters, the magnitudes of the local moments of the atoms in the center of the
cluster are very close to those calculated for the corresponding monolayers.
Similar to the orbital moments, the contributions of the individual atoms to
the magnetic anisotropy energy strongly depend on the position, hence, on the
local environment of a particular atom within a given cluster. We find strong
ferromagnetic coupling between two neighboring Fe or Co atoms and a rapid,
oscillatory decay of the exchange-coupling energy with increasing distance
between these two adatoms.Comment: 8 pages, ReVTeX + 4 figures (Encapsulated Postscript), submitted to
PR
Nonequilibrium Green function approach to photoionization processes in atoms
We present a quantum kinetic approach for the time-resolved description of
many-body effects in photoionization processes in atoms. The method is based on
the non-equilibrium Green functions formalism and solves the
Keldysh/Kadanoff-Baym equations in second Born approximation. An approximation
scheme is introduced and discussed, which provides a complete single-particle
description of the continuum, while the atom is treated fully correlated.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
Attosecond imaging of molecular electronic wavepackets
International audienceA strong laser field may tunnel ionize a molecule from several orbitals simultaneously, forming an attosecond electron–hole wavepacket. Both temporal and spatial information on this wavepacket can be obtained through the coherent soft X-ray emission resulting from the laser-driven recollision of the liberated electron with the core. By characterizing the emission from aligned N 2 molecules, we demonstrate the attosecond contributions of the two highest occupied molecular orbitals. We determine conditions where they are disentangled in the real and imaginary parts of the emission dipole moment. This allows us to carry out a tomographic reconstruction of both orbitals with angstrom spatial resolution. Their coherent superposition provides experimental images of the attosecond wavepacket created in the ionization process. Our results open the prospect of imaging ultrafast intramolecular dynamics combining attosecond and angstrom resolutions
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