Linearly polarized light shifts ferromagnetic resonance frequency through the inverse Cotton-Mouton effect and can dominate thermal shifts.
The prospects of nonthermal magnetization switching in near-compensated rare earth iron garnets
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abstract
Ultrafast spin dynamics in a magnetically compensated rare earth iron garnet film driven by femtosecond optical pulses through the inverse Faraday effect is theoretically investigated. Numerical simulations based on the equations of motion for the N\'eel vector reveal the temporal evolution of the system and its trajectories in the effective potential landscape tuned by external field and temperature. The results demonstrate a clear threshold behavior: weak pulses induce only oscillations around the initial equilibrium state, while a stronger excitation results in a deterministic magnetization switching. The switching threshold is determined by the magnetic state of the sample on its phase diagramme as well as on the laser pulse helicity. This mechanism demonstrates a non-thermal and even non-absorptive pathway towards optomagnonic logic and memory devices.
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cond-mat.mtrl-sci 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
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Optomagnetic non-thermal modification of the ferromagnetic resonance
Linearly polarized light shifts ferromagnetic resonance frequency through the inverse Cotton-Mouton effect and can dominate thermal shifts.