Large magneto-optical Kerr effect and imaging of magnetic octupole domains in an antiferromagnetic metal
Tomoya Higo, Huiyuan Man, Daniel B. Gopman, Liang Wu, Takashi, Koretsune, Olaf M. J. van 't Erve, Yury P. Kabanov, Dylan Rees, Yufan Li,, Michi-To Suzuki, Shreyas Patankar, Muhammad Ikhlas, C. L. Chien, Ryotaro, Arita, Robert D. Shull, Joseph Orenstein, Satoru Nakatsuji

TL;DR
This study reports the first observation of a large magneto-optical Kerr effect in an antiferromagnetic metal at room temperature, enabling imaging of magnetic octupole domains and advancing antiferromagnetic spintronics.
Contribution
It demonstrates a significant MOKE in an AF metal due to magnetic octupole ordering, expanding the understanding of magneto-optical effects in antiferromagnets.
Findings
Large zero-field MOKE observed in Mn3Sn
Magnetic octupole domains imaged via MOKE
First-principles calculations link MOKE to octupole order
Abstract
When a polarized light beam is incident upon the surface of a magnetic material, the reflected light undergoes a polarization rotation. This magneto-optical Kerr effect (MOKE) has been intensively studied in a variety of ferro- and ferrimagnetic materials because it provides a powerful probe for electronic and magnetic properties as well as for various applications including magneto-optical recording. Recently, there has been a surge of interest in antiferromagnets (AFMs) as prospective spintronic materials for high-density and ultrafast memory devices, owing to their vanishingly small stray field and orders of magnitude faster spin dynamics compared to their ferromagnetic counterparts. In fact, the MOKE has proven useful for the study and application of the antiferromagnetic (AF) state. Although limited to insulators, certain types of AFMs are known to exhibit a large MOKE, as they are…
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