Georgi L. Dakovski
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
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Featured researches published by Georgi L. Dakovski.
Science | 2014
Teresa Kubacka; Jeremy A. Johnson; Matthias C. Hoffmann; C. Vicario; S. de Jong; P. Beaud; S. Grübel; S. W. Huang; Lucas Huber; L. Patthey; Yi-De Chuang; J. J. Turner; Georgi L. Dakovski; W. S. Lee; Michael P. Minitti; W. F. Schlotter; R. G. Moore; C.P. Hauri; V. Scagnoli; G. Ingold; S. L. Johnson; U. Staub
Ultrafast Manipulation Multiferroic materials commonly show both magnetism and ferroelectricity, such that the electric field can be used to manipulate the magnetic order, and vice versa. Kubacka et al. (p. 1333, published online 6 March) used a strong terahertz electromagnetic pulse in resonance with an electromagnon—an excitation based on both electric and magnetic ordering—to control the spin dynamics of the multiferroic TbMnO3 on a sub-picosecond time scale and induce the rotation of the spin-cycloid plane of the material. The electric field of an electromagnetic pulse exerts ultrafast control on the spin dynamics of the multiferroic TbMnO3. Multiferroics have attracted strong interest for potential applications where electric fields control magnetic order. The ultimate speed of control via magnetoelectric coupling, however, remains largely unexplored. Here, we report an experiment in which we drove spin dynamics in multiferroic TbMnO3 with an intense few-cycle terahertz (THz) light pulse tuned to resonance with an electromagnon, an electric-dipole active spin excitation. We observed the resulting spin motion using time-resolved resonant soft x-ray diffraction. Our results show that it is possible to directly manipulate atomic-scale magnetic structures with the electric field of light on a sub-picosecond time scale.
Science | 2015
Henrik Öström; Henrik Öberg; Hongliang Xin; J. LaRue; M. Beye; M. Dell’Angela; Jörgen Gladh; May Ling Ng; Jonas A. Sellberg; Sarp Kaya; Giuseppe Mercurio; Dennis Nordlund; Markus Hantschmann; F. Hieke; D. Kühn; W. F. Schlotter; Georgi L. Dakovski; J. J. Turner; Michael P. Minitti; Ankush Mitra; Stefan Moeller; A. Föhlisch; Martin Wolf; W. Wurth; Mats Persson; Jens K. Nørskov; Frank Abild-Pedersen; Hirohito Ogasawara; Lars G. M. Pettersson; Anders Nilsson
Catching CO oxidation Details of the transition state that forms as carbon monoxide (CO) adsorbed on a ruthenium surface is oxidized to CO2 have been revealed by ultrafast excitation and probe methods. Öström et al. initiated the reaction between CO and adsorbed oxygen atoms with laser pulses that rapidly heated the surface and then probed the changes in electronic structure with oxygen x-ray absorption spectroscopy. They observed transition-state configurations that are consistent with density functional theory and a quantum oscillator model. Science, this issue p. 978 Ultrafast x-ray spectroscopy reveals electronic changes that occur during the oxidation of carbon monoxide on a ruthenium surface. Femtosecond x-ray laser pulses are used to probe the carbon monoxide (CO) oxidation reaction on ruthenium (Ru) initiated by an optical laser pulse. On a time scale of a few hundred femtoseconds, the optical laser pulse excites motions of CO and oxygen (O) on the surface, allowing the reactants to collide, and, with a transient close to a picosecond (ps), new electronic states appear in the O K-edge x-ray absorption spectrum. Density functional theory calculations indicate that these result from changes in the adsorption site and bond formation between CO and O with a distribution of OC–O bond lengths close to the transition state (TS). After 1 ps, 10% of the CO populate the TS region, which is consistent with predictions based on a quantum oscillator model.
Nature Materials | 2015
Michael Först; A. D. Caviglia; Raoul Scherwitzl; Roman Mankowsky; Pavlo Zubko; Vikaran Khanna; Hubertus Bromberger; S. B. Wilkins; Y.-D. Chuang; W. S. Lee; W. F. Schlotter; J. J. Turner; Georgi L. Dakovski; Michael P. Minitti; Stephen Clark; Dieter Jaksch; Jean-Marc Triscone; J. P. Hill; S. S. Dhesi; Andrea Cavalleri
Static strain in complex oxide heterostructures has been extensively used to engineer electronic and magnetic properties at equilibrium. In the same spirit, deformations of the crystal lattice with light may be used to achieve functional control across heterointerfaces dynamically. Here, by exciting large-amplitude infrared-active vibrations in a LaAlO3 substrate we induce magnetic order melting in a NdNiO3 film across a heterointerface. Femtosecond resonant soft X-ray diffraction is used to determine the spatiotemporal evolution of the magnetic disordering. We observe a magnetic melt front that propagates from the substrate interface into the film, at a speed that suggests electronically driven motion. Light control and ultrafast phase front propagation at heterointerfaces may lead to new opportunities in optomagnetism, for example by driving domain wall motion to transport information across suitably designed devices.
Physical Review B | 2011
Georgi L. Dakovski; Yinwan Li; Steve Gilbertson; George Rodriguez; Alexander V. Balatsky; Jian-Xin Zhu; K. Gofryk; Eric D. Bauer; Paul H. Tobash; Antoinette J. Taylor; John L. Sarrao; Peter M. Oppeneer; Peter S. Riseborough; J. A. Mydosh; Tomasz Durakiewicz
At T(0) = 17.5 K an exotic phase emerges from a heavy fermion state in URu(2)Si(2). The nature of this hidden order (HO) phase has so far evaded explanation. Formation of an unknown quasiparticle (QP) structure is believed to be responsible for the massive removal of entropy at the HO transition, however, experiments and ab initio calculations have been unable to reveal the essential character of the QP. Here we use femtosecond pump-probe time-and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (tr-ARPES) to elucidate the ultrafast dynamics of the QP. We show how the Fermi surface is renormalized by shifting states away from the Fermi level at specific locations, characterized by vector q( ) = 0.56 +/- 0.08 angstrom(-1). Measurements of the temperature-time response reveal that, upon entering the HO, the QP lifetime in those locations increases from 42 fs to few hundred fs. The formation of the long-lived QPs is identified here as a principal actor of the HO.
Nature Communications | 2016
O. Ciricosta; S. M. Vinko; B. Barbrel; D. S. Rackstraw; T. R. Preston; T. Burian; J. Chalupský; B. I. Cho; H.-K. Chung; Georgi L. Dakovski; K. Engelhorn; V. Hajkova; P. A. Heimann; Michael Holmes; L. Juha; J. Krzywinski; R. W. Lee; S. Toleikis; J. J. Turner; U. Zastrau; J. S. Wark
The effect of a dense plasma environment on the energy levels of an embedded ion is usually described in terms of the lowering of its continuum level. For strongly coupled plasmas, the phenomenon is intimately related to the equation of state; hence, an accurate treatment is crucial for most astrophysical and inertial-fusion applications, where the case of plasma mixtures is of particular interest. Here we present an experiment showing that the standard density-dependent analytical models are inadequate to describe solid-density plasmas at the temperatures studied, where the reduction of the binding energies for a given species is unaffected by the different plasma environment (ion density) in either the element or compounds of that species, and can be accurately estimated by calculations only involving the energy levels of an isolated neutral atom. The results have implications for the standard approaches to the equation of state calculations.
Science | 2017
S. Gerber; S.-L. Yang; Diling Zhu; H. Soifer; J. A. Sobota; S. Rebec; J. J. Lee; Tao Jia; Brian Moritz; Chunjing Jia; A. Gauthier; Y. Li; Dominik Leuenberger; Youyi Zhang; L. Chaix; Wei Li; H. Jang; J.-S. Lee; M. Yi; Georgi L. Dakovski; Sanghoon Song; James M. Glownia; S. Nelson; K. W. Kim; Y.-D. Chuang; Z. Hussain; R. G. Moore; T. P. Devereaux; W. S. Lee; Patrick S. Kirchmann
A deeper look into iron selenide In the past 10 years, iron-based superconductors have created more puzzles than they have helped resolve. Some of the most fundamental outstanding questions are how strong the interactions are and what the electron pairing mechanism is. Now two groups have made contributions toward resolving these questions in the intriguing compound iron selenide (FeSe) (see the Perspective by Lee). Gerber et al. used photoemission spectroscopy coupled with x-ray diffraction to find that FeSe has a very sizable electron-phonon interaction. Quasiparticle interference imaging helped Sprau et al. determine the shape of the superconducting gap and find that the electron pairing in FeSe is orbital-selective. Science, this issue p. 71, p. 75; see also p. 32 Photoemission spectroscopy coupled with x-ray diffraction reveals a sizable electron-phonon interaction in iron selenide. The interactions that lead to the emergence of superconductivity in iron-based materials remain a subject of debate. It has been suggested that electron-electron correlations enhance electron-phonon coupling in iron selenide (FeSe) and related pnictides, but direct experimental verification has been lacking. Here we show that the electron-phonon coupling strength in FeSe can be quantified by combining two time-domain experiments into a “coherent lock-in” measurement in the terahertz regime. X-ray diffraction tracks the light-induced femtosecond coherent lattice motion at a single phonon frequency, and photoemission monitors the subsequent coherent changes in the electronic band structure. Comparison with theory reveals a strong enhancement of the coupling strength in FeSe owing to correlation effects. Given that the electron-phonon coupling affects superconductivity exponentially, this enhancement highlights the importance of the cooperative interplay between electron-electron and electron-phonon interactions.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Boris Vodungbo; Bahrati Tudu; Jonathan Perron; Renaud Delaunay; L. Müller; M. H. Berntsen; G. Grübel; Gregory Malinowski; Christian Weier; J. Gautier; Guillaume Lambert; Philippe Zeitoun; C. Gutt; Emmanuelle Jal; A. H. Reid; Patrick Granitzka; N. Jaouen; Georgi L. Dakovski; Stefan Moeller; Michael P. Minitti; Ankush Mitra; S. Carron; Bastian Pfau; Clemens von Korff Schmising; Michael D. Schneider; S. Eisebitt; Jan Lüning
Does the excitation of ultrafast magnetization require direct interaction between the photons of the optical pump pulse and the magnetic layer? Here, we demonstrate unambiguously that this is not the case. For this we have studied the magnetization dynamics of a ferromagnetic cobalt/palladium multilayer capped by an IR-opaque aluminum layer. Upon excitation with an intense femtosecond-short IR laser pulse, the film exhibits the classical ultrafast demagnetization phenomenon although only a negligible number of IR photons penetrate the aluminum layer. In comparison with an uncapped cobalt/palladium reference film, the initial demagnetization of the capped film occurs with a delayed onset and at a slower rate. Both observations are qualitatively in line with energy transport from the aluminum layer into the underlying magnetic film by the excited, hot electrons of the aluminum film. Our data thus confirm recent theoretical predictions.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016
Daniel Higley; Konstantin Hirsch; Georgi L. Dakovski; Emmanuelle Jal; Edwin Yuan; TianMin Liu; Alberto Lutman; James P. MacArthur; Elke Arenholz; Zhao Chen; G. Coslovich; Peter Denes; Patrick Granitzka; P. Hart; Matthias C. Hoffmann; John Joseph; Loic Le Guyader; Ankush Mitra; Stefan Moeller; Hendrik Ohldag; Matthew D. Seaberg; Padraic Shafer; J. Stöhr; A. Tsukamoto; H.-D. Nuhn; A. H. Reid; Hermann A. Dürr; W. F. Schlotter
X-ray magnetic circular dichroism spectroscopy using an X-ray free electron laser is demonstrated with spectra over the Fe L(3,2)-edges. The high brightness of the X-ray free electron laser combined with high accuracy detection of incident and transmitted X-rays enables ultrafast X-ray magnetic circular dichroism studies of unprecedented sensitivity. This new capability is applied to a study of all-optical magnetic switching dynamics of Fe and Gd magnetic sublattices in a GdFeCo thin film above its magnetization compensation temperature.
Physical Review B | 2014
Michael Först; A. Frano; S. Kaiser; Roman Mankowsky; C. R. Hunt; J. J. Turner; Georgi L. Dakovski; Michael P. Minitti; T. Loew; M. Le Tacon; B. Keimer; J. P. Hill; Andrea Cavalleri; S. S. Dhesi
In this study, we use femtosecond resonant soft x-ray diffraction to measure the optically stimulated ultrafast changes of charge density wave correlations in underdoped YBa₂Cu₃O₆.₆. We find that when coherent interlayer transport is enhanced by optical excitation of the apical oxygen distortions, at least 50% of the in-plane charge density wave order is melted. These results indicate that charge ordering and superconductivity may be competing up to the charge ordering transition temperature, with the latter becoming a hidden phase that is accessible only by nonlinear phonon excitation.
Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2015
Georgi L. Dakovski; Philip A. Heimann; Michael Holmes; O. Krupin; Michael P. Minitti; Ankush Mitra; Stefan Moeller; Michael Rowen; W. F. Schlotter; J. J. Turner
A description of the Soft X-ray Research instrument (SXR) at the Linac Coherent Light Source is given. Recent scientific highlights illustrate the wide variety of experiments and detectors that can be accommodated at SXR.