684 research outputs found
Electronic Theory for the Nonlinear Magneto-Optical Response of Transition-Metals at Surfaces and Interfaces: Dependence of the Kerr-Rotation on Polarization and on the Magnetic Easy Axis
We extend our previous study of the polarization dependence of the nonlinear
optical response to the case of magnetic surfaces and buried magnetic
interfaces. We calculate for the longitudinal and polar configuration the
nonlinear magneto-optical Kerr rotation angle. In particular, we show which
tensor elements of the susceptibilities are involved in the enhancement of the
Kerr rotation in nonlinear optics for different configurations and we
demonstrate by a detailed analysis how the direction of the magnetization and
thus the easy axis at surfaces and buried interfaces can be determined from the
polarization dependence of the nonlinear magneto-optical response, since the
nonlinear Kerr rotation is sensitive to the electromagnetic field components
instead of merely the intensities. We also prove from the microscopic treatment
of spin-orbit coupling that there is an intrinsic phase difference of
90 between tensor elements which are even or odd under magnetization
reversal in contrast to linear magneto-optics. Finally, we compare our results
with several experiments on Co/Cu films and on Co/Au and Fe/Cr multilayers. We
conclude that the nonlinear magneto-optical Kerr-effect determines uniquely the
magnetic structure and in particular the magnetic easy axis in films and at
multilayer interfaces.Comment: 23 pages Revtex, preprintstyle, 2 uuencoded figure
Theory for Spin-Polarized Oscillations in Nonlinear Magneto-Optics due to Quantum Well States
Using an electronic tight-binding theory we calculate the nonlinear
magneto-optical response from an x-Cu/1Fe/Cu(001) film as a function of
frequency and Cu overlayer thickness (x=3 ... 25). We find very strong
spin-polarized quantum well oscillations in the nonlinear magneto-optical Kerr
effect (NOLIMOKE). These are enhanced by the large density of Fe states
close to the Fermi level acting as intermediate states for frequency doubling.
In good agreement with experiment we find two oscillation periods of 6-7 and 11
monolayers the latter being more pronounced.Comment: 12 pages, Revtex, 3 postscript figure
Nonlinear Magneto-Optical Response of - and -Wave Superconductors
The nonlinear magneto-optical response of - and -wave superconductors
is discussed. We carry out the symmetry analysis of the nonlinear
magneto-optical susceptibility in the superconducting state. Due to the surface
sensitivity of the nonlinear optical response for systems with bulk inversion
symmetry, we perform a group theoretical classification of the superconducting
order parameter close to a surface. For the first time, the mixing of singlet
and triplet pairing states induced by spin-orbit coupling is systematically
taken into account. We show that the interference of singlet and triplet
pairing states leads to an observable contribution of the nonlinear
magneto-optical Kerr effect. This effect is not only sensitive to the
anisotropy of the gap function but also to the symmetry itself. In view of the
current discussion of the order parameter symmetry of High-T
superconductors, results for a tetragonal system with bulk singlet pairing for
various pairing symmetries are discussed.Comment: 21 pages (REVTeX) with 8 figures (Postscript
Density-functional study of hydrogen chemisorption on vicinal Si(001) surfaces
Relaxed atomic geometries and chemisorption energies have been calculated for
the dissociative adsorption of molecular hydrogen on vicinal Si(001) surfaces.
We employ density-functional theory, together with a pseudopotential for Si,
and apply the generalized gradient approximation by Perdew and Wang to the
exchange-correlation functional. We find the double-atomic-height rebonded D_B
step, which is known to be stable on the clean surface, to remain stable on
partially hydrogen-covered surfaces. The H atoms preferentially bind to the Si
atoms at the rebonded step edge, with a chemisorption energy difference with
respect to the terrace sites of >sim 0.1 eV. A surface with rebonded single
atomic height S_A and S_B steps gives very similar results. The interaction
between H-Si-Si-H mono-hydride units is shown to be unimportant for the
calculation of the step-edge hydrogen-occupation. Our results confirm the
interpretation and results of the recent H_2 adsorption experiments on vicinal
Si surfaces by Raschke and Hoefer described in the preceding paper.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. B. Other related
publications can be found at http://www.rz-berlin.mpg.de/th/paper.htm
Differential Runx3, Eomes, and T-bet expression subdivides MS-associated CD4<sup>+</sup> T cells with brain-homing capacity
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a common and devastating chronic inflammatory disease of the CNS. CD4 + T cells are assumed to be the first to cross the blood–central nervous system (CNS) barrier and trigger local inflammation. Here, we explored how pathogenicity-associated effector programs define CD4 + T cell subsets with brain-homing ability in MS. Runx3- and Eomes-, but not T-bet-expressing CD4 + memory cells were diminished in the blood of MS patients. This decline reversed following natalizumab treatment and was supported by a Runx3 +Eomes +T-bet − enrichment in cerebrospinal fluid samples of treatment-naïve MS patients. This transcription factor profile was associated with high granzyme K (GZMK) and CCR5 levels and was most prominent in Th17.1 cells (CCR6 +CXCR3 +CCR4 −/dim). Previously published CD28 − CD4 T cells were characterized by a Runx3 +Eomes −T-bet + phenotype that coincided with intermediate CCR5 and a higher granzyme B (GZMB) and perforin expression, indicating the presence of two separate subsets. Under steady-state conditions, granzyme K high Th17.1 cells spontaneously passed the blood–brain barrier in vitro. This was only found for other subsets including CD28 − cells when using inflamed barriers. Altogether, CD4 + T cells contain small fractions with separate pathogenic features, of which Th17.1 seems to breach the blood–brain barrier as a possible early event in MS.</p
Differential Runx3, Eomes, and T-bet expression subdivides MS-associated CD4<sup>+</sup> T cells with brain-homing capacity
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a common and devastating chronic inflammatory disease of the CNS. CD4 + T cells are assumed to be the first to cross the blood–central nervous system (CNS) barrier and trigger local inflammation. Here, we explored how pathogenicity-associated effector programs define CD4 + T cell subsets with brain-homing ability in MS. Runx3- and Eomes-, but not T-bet-expressing CD4 + memory cells were diminished in the blood of MS patients. This decline reversed following natalizumab treatment and was supported by a Runx3 +Eomes +T-bet − enrichment in cerebrospinal fluid samples of treatment-naïve MS patients. This transcription factor profile was associated with high granzyme K (GZMK) and CCR5 levels and was most prominent in Th17.1 cells (CCR6 +CXCR3 +CCR4 −/dim). Previously published CD28 − CD4 T cells were characterized by a Runx3 +Eomes −T-bet + phenotype that coincided with intermediate CCR5 and a higher granzyme B (GZMB) and perforin expression, indicating the presence of two separate subsets. Under steady-state conditions, granzyme K high Th17.1 cells spontaneously passed the blood–brain barrier in vitro. This was only found for other subsets including CD28 − cells when using inflamed barriers. Altogether, CD4 + T cells contain small fractions with separate pathogenic features, of which Th17.1 seems to breach the blood–brain barrier as a possible early event in MS.</p
Femtosecond control of electric currents at the interfaces of metallic ferromagnetic heterostructures
The idea to utilize not only the charge but also the spin of electrons in the
operation of electronic devices has led to the development of spintronics,
causing a revolution in how information is stored and processed. A novel
advancement would be to develop ultrafast spintronics using femtosecond laser
pulses. Employing terahertz (10 Hz) emission spectroscopy, we
demonstrate optical generation of spin-polarized electric currents at the
interfaces of metallic ferromagnetic heterostructures at the femtosecond
timescale. The direction of the photocurrent is controlled by the helicity of
the circularly polarized light. These results open up new opportunities for
realizing spintronics in the unprecedented terahertz regime and provide new
insights in all-optical control of magnetism.Comment: 3 figures and 2 tables in the main tex
Nonlinear Magneto-Optics of Fe Monolayers from first principles: Structural dependence and spin-orbit coupling strength
We calculate the nonlinear magneto-optical response of free-standing fcc
(001), (110) and (111) oriented Fe monolayers. The bandstructures are
determined from first principles using a full-potential LAPW method with the
additional implementation of spin-orbit coupling. The variation of the
spin-orbit coupling strength and the nonlinear magneto-optical spectra upon
layer orientation are investigated. We find characteristic differences which
indicate an enhanced sensitivity of nonlinear magneto-optics to surface
orientation and variation of the in-plane lattice constants. In particular the
crossover from onedimensional stripe structures to twodimensional films of
(111) layers exhibits a clean signature in the nonlinear Kerr-spectra and
demonstrates the versatility of nonlinear magneto-optics as a tool for in situ
thin-film analysis.Comment: 28 pages, RevTeX, psfig, submitted to PR
Structural, spectroscopic and catalytic activity studies on glutathione reductase reconstituted with FAD analogues
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/66378/1/j.1432-1033.1991.tb16100.x.pd
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