Experimental demonstration of Scanned Spin-Precession Microscopy

ORAL

Abstract

We present the demonstration of a new spin-microscopy tool that relies on the precessional response of spins to the spatially heterogeneous field of a micromagnet. In this first experiment, we map the spin density within an optically pumped GaAs sample by recording the variations of a global spin-photoluminescence signal as a function of a micromagnetic probe's position (relative to the pump beam). The spin density map is then obtained by deconvolving the measured signal with an experimentally or theoretically determined response of the spins to their magnetic environment. The response function is sensitive to other important properties, such as spin lifetime and gyromagnetic ratio, and thus these properties can also imaged. Further, the technique can be employed in conjunction with both optical and electrical detection schemes. In the former case it can enhance the imaging resolution while for the latter it can enable imaging. Due to the magnetic nature of coupling between the probe and the spins, this technique has the potential to be material independent and enable subsurface imaging.

Authors

  • Vidya Bhallamudi

    Department of Physics, The Ohio State University, The Ohio State University

  • Christopher Wolfe

    Department of Physics, The Ohio State University, The Ohio State University

  • Vivek Amin

    Department of Physics and Astronomy, Texas A\&M University, Texas A\&M University

  • Dominic Labanowski

    Department of Physics, The Ohio State University, The Ohio State University

  • Andrew Berger

    Department of Physics, The Ohio State University, The Ohio State University

  • David Stroud

    Department of Physics, The Ohio State University, The Ohio State University

  • Jairo Sinova

    Texas A\&M University, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Texas A\&M University, Texas Agricultural and Mechanical University, Department of Physics, Texas A\&M University, Department of Physics, Texas A\&M University, College Station, TX 77843-4242, USA, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Texas A$\&$M University, TX 77843

  • Chris Hammel

    Department of Physics, The Ohio State University, The Ohio State University