Classical-Field Theory of Electron Waves as a Polarized Radiation Probe of Magnetic Surfaces
D. C. Hatton, J. A. C. Bland

TL;DR
This paper introduces a classical-field theoretical model showing how electron waves can be polarized upon reflection or transmission from magnetic surfaces, enabling magnetic surface characterization without inelastic processes.
Contribution
It presents a novel mechanism for electron beam polarization via surface interactions, extending the understanding of polarized electron probes for magnetic surfaces.
Findings
Electron reflection depends on spin orientation angle theta.
Reflected polarization can be controlled by magnetic field and potential.
The theory extends to multilayer structures using Fabry-Perot models.
Abstract
Recently, there has been a revival of interest in mechanisms for changing the spin polarization of an electron beam on transmission through, or reflection from, a magnetic surface. An understanding of these mechanisms would allow the use of an electron beam as a polarized radiation probe for magnetic characterization, like light in MOKE and neutrons in PNR. Here, a mechanism is described which, unlike simultaneously occurring processes proposed elsewhere, polarizes an unpolarized incident beam without recourse to inelastic processes. A magnetic field leads to a Zeeman term in an electron's Hamiltonian, which depends on the angle theta between the electron's spin vector and the magnetic flux. As a result, when an electron wave is incident on the surface of a bulk magnetic material (figure 1,) the wave-number of the transmitted wave depends on theta. When the conditions of continuity of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Accelerators and Free-Electron Lasers · Particle accelerators and beam dynamics · Crystallography and Radiation Phenomena
