Polarized phonons carry the missing angular momentum in femtosecond demagnetization
S. R. Tauchert, M. Volkov, D. Ehberger, D. Kazenwadel, M. Evers, H., Lange, A. Donges, A. Book, W. Kreuzpaintner, U. Nowak, P. Baum

TL;DR
This paper reveals that polarized phonons in nickel rapidly absorb the angular momentum lost during femtosecond demagnetization, providing an atomistic understanding of ultrafast magnetic dynamics and conservation laws.
Contribution
It introduces the concept that circularly polarized phonons carry the missing angular momentum during ultrafast demagnetization, linking phonon dynamics to magnetic angular momentum transfer.
Findings
Polarized phonons appear instantly as magnetization is lost.
Anisotropic high-frequency phonons absorb angular momentum.
Demagnetization time correlates with atomic acceleration.
Abstract
Magnetic phenomena are ubiquitous in our surroundings and indispensable for modern science and technology, but it is notoriously difficult to change the magnetic order of a material in a rapid way. However, if a thin nickel film is subjected to ultrashort laser pulses, it can lose its magnetic order almost completely within merely femtosecond times. This phenomenon, in the meantime also observed in many other materials, has connected magnetism with femtosecond optics in an efficient, ultrafast and complex way, offering opportunities for rapid information processing or ultrafast spintronics at frequencies approaching those of light. Consequently, the physics of ultrafast demagnetization is central to modern material research, but a crucial question has remained elusive: If a material loses its magnetization within only femtoseconds, where is the missing angular momentum in such short…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsMagnetic properties of thin films · Advanced Electron Microscopy Techniques and Applications · High-pressure geophysics and materials
