Abstract

Magnetooptical spectroscopy is an effective method for studying the magnetic microstructure of homogeneous and heterogeneous magnets. This review is devoted to analysis of numerous factors affecting the intensity and spectral dependence of a magnetooptical signal of the equatorial Kerr effect in nanocomposites “ferromagnetic metal–dielectric” in the visible and near infrared spectral regions. Examples of the influence of the metal concentration, nanoparticle size and shape, the substrate, the material of the dielectric, the amorphization of grains, the deposition method, and other factors on the magnetooptical spectrum are considered. The differences in the magnetooptical spectra for the superparamagnetic, superferromagnetic, and ferromagnetic states are demonstrated. It is noted that in the presence of fractions with different field dependences of the magnetization in a nanocomposite, the magnetooptical signal is not proportional to the total magnetization. Examples of enhancement and sign inversion of the magnetooptical signal in nanocomposites are considered. The possibility of the description of magnetooptical spectra using the methods of the effective medium (the Bruggeman method and the Maxwell–Garnett symmetrized approximation) is discussed.

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