Large magneto-optical Kerr effect induced by collinear antiferromagnetic order
H. Yoshimochi, K. Yoshida, R. Oiwa, T. Nomoto, N. D. Khanh, A. Kitaori, R. Takagi, R. Arita, S. Seki

TL;DR
This paper reports a giant magneto-optical Kerr effect in a collinear antiferromagnetic insulator, alpha-Fe2O3, demonstrating optical detection of antiferromagnetic order despite the lack of net magnetization.
Contribution
It reveals that collinear antiferromagnetic order can produce a large Kerr effect, challenging the notion that only ferromagnets exhibit significant magneto-optical responses.
Findings
Giant Kerr rotation (~80 mdeg) observed in alpha-Fe2O3.
First-principles calculations match experimental Kerr spectra.
Antiferromagnetic order breaks Tt-symmetry, enabling Kerr effect.
Abstract
In modern technology, the optical readout of magnetic information is conventionally achieved by the magneto-optical Kerr effect, i.e., the polarization rotation of reflected light. The Kerr rotation is sensitive to time-reversal symmetry breaking and generally proportional to magnetization, enabling optical readout of the up and down spin states in ferromagnets. By contrast, antiferromagnets with a collinear antiparallel spin arrangement have long been considered inactive to such magneto-optical responses, because of Tt-symmetry (time-reversal T followed by translation t symmetry) and lack of macroscopic magnetization. Here, we report the observation of giant magneto-optical Kerr effect in a room-temperature antiferromagnetic insulator alpha-Fe2O3. In this compound, the up-down and down-up spin states induce the opposite sign of spontaneous Kerr effect, whose Kerr rotation angle turned…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMultiferroics and related materials · Magneto-Optical Properties and Applications · Magnetic properties of thin films
