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Dive into the research topics where Yoshie Murooka is active.

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Featured researches published by Yoshie Murooka.


Nature Communications | 2015

Simultaneous observation of the quantization and the interference pattern of a plasmonic near-field.

Lac. Piazza; Tom T. A. Lummen; Erik Quinonez; Yoshie Murooka; B.W. Reed; Brett Barwick; Fabrizio Carbone

Surface plasmon polaritons can confine electromagnetic fields in subwavelength spaces and are of interest for photonics, optical data storage devices and biosensing applications. In analogy to photons, they exhibit wave–particle duality, whose different aspects have recently been observed in separate tailored experiments. Here we demonstrate the ability of ultrafast transmission electron microscopy to simultaneously image both the spatial interference and the quantization of such confined plasmonic fields. Our experiments are accomplished by spatiotemporally overlapping electron and light pulses on a single nanowire suspended on a graphene film. The resulting energy exchange between single electrons and the quanta of the photoinduced near-field is imaged synchronously with its spatial interference pattern. This methodology enables the control and visualization of plasmonic fields at the nanoscale, providing a promising tool for understanding the fundamental properties of confined electromagnetic fields and the development of advanced photonic circuits.


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Direct Observation of Optically Induced Transient Structures in Graphite Using Ultrafast Electron Crystallography

Ramani K. Raman; Yoshie Murooka; Chong Yu Ruan; Teng Yang; Savas Berber; David Tománek

We use ultrafast electron crystallography to study structural changes induced in graphite by a femtosecond laser pulse. At moderate fluences of < or =21 mJ/cm2, lattice vibrations are observed to thermalize on a time scale of approximately 8 ps. At higher fluences approaching the damage threshold, lattice vibration amplitudes saturate. Following a marked initial contraction, graphite is driven nonthermally into a transient state with sp3-like character, forming interlayer bonds. Using ab initio density functional calculations, we trace the governing mechanism back to electronic structure changes following the photoexcitation.


Nano Letters | 2007

Dynamics of Size-Selected Gold Nanoparticles Studied by Ultrafast Electron Nanocrystallography

Chong Yu Ruan; Yoshie Murooka; Ramani K. Raman; Ryan A. Murdick

We report the studies of ultrafast electron nanocrystallography on size-selected Au nanoparticles (2-20 nm) supported on a molecular interface. Reversible surface melting, melting, and recrystallization were investigated with dynamical full-profile radial distribution functions determined with subpicosecond and picometer accuracies. In an ultrafast photoinduced melting, the nanoparticles are driven to a nonequilibrium transformation, characterized by the initial lattice deformations, nonequilibrium electron-phonon coupling, and, upon melting, the collective bonding and debonding, transforming nanocrystals into shelled nanoliquids. The displasive structural excitation at premelting and the coherent transformation with crystal/liquid coexistence during photomelting differ from the reciprocal behavior of recrystallization, where a hot lattice forms from liquid and then thermally contracts. The degree of structural change and the thermodynamics of melting are found to depend on the size of nanoparticle.


Microscopy and Microanalysis | 2009

The development and applications of ultrafast electron nanocrystallography.

Chong Yu Ruan; Yoshie Murooka; Ramani K. Raman; Ryan A. Murdick; Richard J. Worhatch; Aric Pell

We review the development of ultrafast electron nanocrystallography as a method for investigating structural dynamics for nanoscale materials and interfaces. Its sensitivity and resolution are demonstrated in the studies of surface melting of gold nanocrystals, nonequilibrium transformation of graphite into reversible diamond-like intermediates, and molecular scale charge dynamics, showing a versatility for not only determining the structures, but also the charge and energy redistribution at interfaces. A quantitative scheme for 3D retrieval of atomic structures is demonstrated with few-particle (<1,000) sensitivity, establishing this nanocrystallographic method as a tool for directly visualizing dynamics within isolated nanomaterials with atomic scale spatio-temporal resolution.


Physical Review B | 2008

Photovoltage dynamics of the hydroxylated Si(111) surface investigated by ultrafast electron diffraction

Ryan A. Murdick; Ramani K. Raman; Yoshie Murooka; Chong Yu Ruan

We present a novel method to measure transient photovoltage at nanointerfaces using ultrafast electron diffraction. In particular, we report our results on the photoinduced electronic excitations and their ensuing relaxations in a hydroxyl-terminated silicon surface, a standard substrate for fabricating molecular electronics interfaces. The transient surface voltage is determined by observing Coulomb refraction changes induced by the modified space-charge barrier within a selectively probed volume by femtosecond electron pulses. The results are in agreement with ultrafast photoemission studies of surface state charging, suggesting a charge relaxation mechanism closely coupled to the carrier dynamics near the surface that can be described by a drift-diffusion model. This study demonstrates a newly implemented ultrafast diffraction method for investigating interfacial processes, with both charge and structure resolution.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Filming the formation and fluctuation of skyrmion domains by cryo-Lorentz transmission electron microscopy

Jayaraman Rajeswari; Ping Huang; Giulia F. Mancini; Yoshie Murooka; Tatiana Latychevskaia; D. McGrouther; Marco Cantoni; Edoardo Baldini; J. S. White; Arnaud Magrez; Thierry Giamarchi; Henrik M. Rønnow; Fabrizio Carbone

Significance The need for denser storage devices calls for new materials and nanostructures capable of confining single bits of information in a few nanometers. A new topological distribution of spins termed skyrmions is emerging, which promises to robustly confine a small magnetization in a few-nanometers-wide circular domain. A great deal of attention is being devoted to the understanding of these magnetic patterns and their manipulation. We manufactured a large nanoslice supporting over 70,000 skyrmions, and film their evolution in direct-space via cryo-Lorentz transmission electron microscopy. We reveal the octagonal distortion of the skyrmion lattice and show how these distortions and other defects impact its long-range order. These results pave the way to the control of a large two-dimensional array of skyrmions. Magnetic skyrmions are promising candidates as information carriers in logic or storage devices thanks to their robustness, guaranteed by the topological protection, and their nanometric size. Currently, little is known about the influence of parameters such as disorder, defects, or external stimuli on the long-range spatial distribution and temporal evolution of the skyrmion lattice. Here, using a large (7.3×7.3 μm2) single-crystal nanoslice (150 nm thick) of Cu2OSeO3, we image up to 70,000 skyrmions by means of cryo-Lorentz transmission electron microscopy as a function of the applied magnetic field. The emergence of the skyrmion lattice from the helimagnetic phase is monitored, revealing the existence of a glassy skyrmion phase at the phase transition field, where patches of an octagonally distorted skyrmion lattice are also discovered. In the skyrmion phase, dislocations are shown to cause the emergence and switching between domains with different lattice orientations, and the temporal fluctuation of these domains is filmed. These results demonstrate the importance of direct-space and real-time imaging of skyrmion domains for addressing both their long-range topology and stability.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Electronically driven fragmentation of silver nanocrystals revealed by ultrafast electron crystallography.

Ramani K. Raman; Ryan A. Murdick; Richard J. Worhatch; Yoshie Murooka; Subhendra D. Mahanti; Tzong Ru T Han; Chong Yu Ruan

We report an ultrafast electron diffraction study of silver nanocrystals under surface plasmon resonance excitation, leading to a concerted fragmentation. By examining simultaneously transient structural, thermal, and Coulombic signatures of the prefragmented state, an electronically driven nonthermal fragmentation scenario is proposed.


Physical Review Letters | 2018

Laser-Induced Skyrmion Writing and Erasing in an Ultrafast Cryo-Lorentz Transmission Electron Microscope

Gabriele Berruto; I. Madan; Yoshie Murooka; Giovanni M. Vanacore; Enrico Pomarico; Jayaraman Rajeswari; R. J. Lamb; Ping Huang; Alex Kruchkov; Yoshihiko Togawa; T. LaGrange; D. McGrouther; Henrik M. Rønnow; Fabrizio Carbone

We demonstrate that light-induced heat pulses of different duration and energy can write Skyrmions in a broad range of temperatures and magnetic field in FeGe. Using a combination of camera-rate and pump-probe cryo-Lorentz transmission electron microscopy, we directly resolve the spatiotemporal evolution of the magnetization ensuing optical excitation. The Skyrmion lattice was found to maintain its structural properties during the laser-induced demagnetization, and its recovery to the initial state happened in the sub-μs to μs range, depending on the cooling rate of the system.


Applied Physics Letters | 2013

Determination of transient atomic structure of laser-excited materials from time-resolved diffraction data

Yvelin Giret; Nobuyasu Naruse; Szymon L. Daraszewicz; Yoshie Murooka; Jinfeng Yang; Dorothy M. Duffy; Alexander L. Shluger; Katsumi Tanimura

The time evolution of the Bragg peaks of photo-excited gold nanofilms is measured using transmission ultrafast electron diffraction (UED) with 3.0 MeV electron pulses and the corresponding structure evolution is calculated using two-temperature molecular dynamics (2T-MD). The good agreement obtained between the measured and calculated Bragg peaks, over the full experimental timescale, enables the lattice temperature effects and the structural changes to be disentangled for the first time. The agreement demonstrates that 2T-MD is a reliable method for solving the inverse problem of structure determination of laser irradiated metals in UED measurements.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Magnetic Skyrmions and Skyrmion Clusters in the Helical Phase of Cu2OSeO3

Jan Müller; Jayaraman Rajeswari; Ping Huang; Yoshie Murooka; Henrik M. Rønnow; Fabrizio Carbone; Achim Rosch

Skyrmions are nanometric spin whirls that can be stabilized in magnets lacking inversion symmetry. The properties of isolated Skyrmions embedded in a ferromagnetic background have been intensively studied. We show that single Skyrmions and clusters of Skyrmions can also form in the helical phase and investigate theoretically their energetics and dynamics. The helical background provides natural one-dimensional channels along which a Skyrmion can move rapidly. In contrast to Skyrmions in ferromagnets, the Skyrmion-Skyrmion interaction has a strong attractive component and thus Skyrmions tend to form clusters with characteristic shapes. These clusters are directly observed in transmission electron microscopy measurements in thin films of Cu_{2}OSeO_{3}. Topological quantization, high mobility, and the confinement of Skyrmions in channels provided by the helical background may be useful for future spintronics devices.

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Chong Yu Ruan

Michigan State University

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Ramani K. Raman

Michigan State University

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Ryan A. Murdick

Michigan State University

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Fabrizio Carbone

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Henrik M. Rønnow

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Ping Huang

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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