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Magnetic neutron wave guides for optical devices

Magnetic neutron wave guides for optical devices. Frédéric OTT 1 , Sergey KOZHEVNIKOV 1,2 1 Laboratoire Léon Brillouin, CEA Saclay, France 2 Frank Laboratory of Neutron Physics, JINR, Dubna, Russia. Sergey KOZHEVNIKOV. Arrived: September 2004, LLB, postdoc

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Magnetic neutron wave guides for optical devices

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  1. Magnetic neutron wave guides for optical devices Frédéric OTT1, Sergey KOZHEVNIKOV1,2 1Laboratoire Léon Brillouin, CEA Saclay, France 2Frank Laboratory of Neutron Physics, JINR, Dubna, Russia

  2. Sergey KOZHEVNIKOV • Arrived: September 2004, LLB, postdoc • From: Frank Laboratory of Neutron Physics, Joint Institute for Nuclear Research, Dubna, Russia • PhD thesis “Investigation and application of spatial splitting of neutron beam in magnetic media”, Dubna, 2002 • Previous activities: Neutron depolarization in superconductors and magnetics Polarized neutron reflectometry Development of neutron polarization analysis on old SPN-1 reflectometer (Dubna) Testing of new REMUR reflectometer (Dubna) Development of SESANS on TOF spectrometer

  3. Outline • Magnetic wave-guides Neutron interaction with an modulated optical magnetic potential • Present state (understanding wave-guides) • Future work (simulation - RF Kerr)

  4. Modulated Magnetic Potential • Use of a magnetic modulation to dynamically vary the optical properties of a reflecting layer • Principle : • Magnetisation of the layer rotates at speed w • Optical potential : V(t) = U + u(t) Optical index Potential variations due to the rotation of the magnetisation Vacuum (incidence medium) Magnetic layer

  5. Principle • Change of momentum of the neutron when there is an exchange of a quantum (during a spin-flip) • Amount of “inelastic reflection” in grazing incidence (~ 0.5°) • a large fraction of the incident beam (between 10 and 30%) . • [1] A. Frank et al, Ann. Of the New York Ac. Sc. 755 (1995) 858.[2] R. Golub et al, Am. J. Phys. 62 (1994) 779. Incident beam specular reflection (NSF) “inelastic” reflection (SF)

  6. Potential applications • Control of the reflection angles and reflection by varying the frequency • Coherent separation of a beam (for interferometry) • Wavelength dispersion for a time of flight reflectometer for an energy analysis of a white beam. • Neutron switch in the case of a magnetic pulse • Solid flipper with tuneable parameters

  7. Samples • Large magnetisation • Low coercivity (Amorphous layers) • Permalloy – Co alloys • Single crystal layers • Low damping (Fe, a = 0.005) • Problem of the losses in the system • Insulating ferromagnetics (magnetic oxides) • Patterned layers

  8. Magnetic neutron wave guides for neutron optical devices • ILL Annual Report • F. Pfeiffer, V. Leiner, P. Høghøj, I. Anderson Optical index Soft magnetic layer Guiding layer (with low optical index) Pinned magnetic layer substrate

  9. Combination : dynamics and wave-guides • Magnetic traps Allows the neutron beam to freely enter the guide Acts like a guide

  10. Combination : dynamics and wave-guides • The modulation of the top magnetic layer should allow to trap neutron bunches inside the waveguide

  11. Work plan • Wave guides (Cu/Al/Cu) choice is suitable for x-ray AND neutrons • X-ray characterisation (in progress)and simulation wave-function (for x-rays and neutrons) • Neutron characterisation (1-10 Dec 2004)static magnetisation • Equipment for RF KERR has arrived • Set-up during winter – spring 2005

  12. Samples preparation • At the moment • Evaporation • Quality seems to good enough • Good flexibility and large choice of materials (mainly metals)

  13. Simulation of neutron wave-guides • SimulReflec available at http://www-llb.cea.fr/prism/programs/simulreflec/simulreflec.html Theta in =0.42 nm PRISMA reflectometer, LLB z Cu Al Cu Air Cu Ti Cu Air Cu Al Cu Air (75nm) (75nm) (50nm)

  14. Simulation • The potential well should not be too deep • Al is perfectly suitable for the guide material • Ti provides a contrast which is too largeThe first mode cannot be confined in the guide • The use of Al makes the structures easy to test with x-rays

  15. Simulation : to be done • Include the Spin-Flip signal in the modeling of magnetic guides • Include the interaction with a dynamically modulated magnetization

  16. X-rays characterization of a wave-guide structures • In the reflectivity signal the “signature” of the WG structure can be directly probed by the presence of absorption “resonances” in the specular reflectivity signal

  17. Neutron characterization of a wave-guide structure Qx Qz • Glass//Co(190mn)/Al(260nm)/Co(10nm) 2002, EROS, LLB The structure of the off-specular signal is the signature of the wave-guide effect. The off-specular signal is enhanced when the wave-function is localized.

  18. Neutron wave-guides • No absorption • BUT off-specular scattering can be observed if the roughness of the interfaces is large • Next month • Direct observation of the wave-guide signal • See Pfeiffer measurements

  19. Modelling (dynamics) • Anne de Virmes (to arrive during winter) • Modelling of magnetic systems in the RF – HF range

  20. RF Kerr setup project laser beam polarizer analyzer fast photodiode RF field exciter sample (thin magnetic film) lock-in radio frequency acquisition

  21. Conclusion • Project covers broad range of expertise (sample preparation and characterization, RF magnetization, Kerr, etc.) • X-ray sample characterization and simulations have been started • Neutron sample characterization is in the nearest future

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