The Ultrafast Einstein-De Haas Effect
Christian Dornes, Yves Acremann, Matteo Savoini, Martin Kubli, Martin, J. Neugebauer, Elsa Abreu, Lucas Huber, Gabriel Lantz, Carlos A. F. Vaz,, Henrik Lemke, Elisabeth M. Bothschafter, Michael Porer, Vincent Esposito,, Laurenz Rettig, Michele Buzzi, Aurora Alberca

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that during ultrafast demagnetisation in ferromagnetic iron, a significant portion of angular momentum is transferred to the lattice within 200 femtoseconds, revealing the lattice's crucial role in the process.
Contribution
It provides direct experimental evidence that lattice interactions are key in ultrafast demagnetisation, quantifying the angular momentum transfer timescale and amount.
Findings
80% of angular momentum lost from spins transferred to lattice
Angular momentum transfer occurs within approximately 200 fs
Lattice interactions are essential in ultrafast demagnetisation
Abstract
The original observation of the Einstein-de Haas effect was a landmark experiment in the early history of modern physics that illustrates the relationship between magnetism and angular momentum. Today the effect is still discussed in elementary physics courses to demonstrate that the angular momentum associated with the aligned electron spins in a ferromagnet can be converted to mechanical angular momentum by reversing the direction of magnetisation using an external magnetic field. In recent times, a related problem in magnetism concerns the time-scale over which this angular momentum transfer can occur. It is known experimentally for several metallic ferromagnets that intense photoexcitation leads to a drop in the magnetisation on a time scale shorter than 100 fs, a phenomenon called ultrafast demagnetisation. The microscopic mechanism for this process has been hotly debated, with one…
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