POSSIBLE NEARLY LOSS-FREE FERRIMAGNETIC RESONANCE IN SMALL SAMPLES

Authors
Citation
Jb. Sokoloff, POSSIBLE NEARLY LOSS-FREE FERRIMAGNETIC RESONANCE IN SMALL SAMPLES, Journal of applied physics, 79(8), 1996, pp. 4564-4566
Citations number
23
Categorie Soggetti
Physics, Applied
Journal title
ISSN journal
00218979
Volume
79
Issue
8
Year of publication
1996
Part
2A
Pages
4564 - 4566
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-8979(1996)79:8<4564:PNLFRI>2.0.ZU;2-B
Abstract
Relaxation occurs in ferrimagnetic resonance by processes which transf er energy from the uniform precession magnon mode, which is excited in the resonance process, to other magnons and to phonons. The relaxatio n due to these processes is usually calculated using Fermi Golden Rule time dependent perturbation theory, whose application depends on the modes involved in the relaxation processes forming a continuum. Since for a finite isolated solid this is not generally true, the possibilit y exists that such relaxation processes might not occur for sufficient ly small samples. Because it is reasonable to consider the phonons as belonging to both the sample and sample holder, it is reasonable to as sume that they form a continuum. The intrinsic linewidth (i.e., invers e lifetime for a defect-free single crystal), which is due to phonons excited by the Kasuya-Le Craw mechanism, is already comparable to the magnon mode spacing for samples of linear dimensions of the order of 1 0 mu m, indicating that finite sample effects could potentially become important for samples of fairly large size. Previous work by the pres ent author on the one-dimensional Heisenberg model has shown that nonl inearity in the magnons can lead to a transition from lossy to loss-fr ee behavior as the sample size decreases, if the temperature is suffic iently low. Here, model calculations of this effect in a two-dimension al Heisenberg model magnet are presented in order to show that loss-fr ee behavior can occur for sufficiently low temperature and sufficientl y small sample size. These results open up the interesting possibility of producing high anisotropy magnetic materials as a collection of ve ry small crystals with extremely small linewidths. (C) 1996 American I nstitute of Physics.