Abstract

We have measured the stress birefringence in several magnetic garnets (YIG, YbIG, GdTbIG, and CVBIG) and one nonmagnetic garnet (GdGaG). Measurements were made at room temperature by applying both a static uniaxial stress and a saturating magnetic field along 〈100〉 and 〈111〉 axes. Nonuniformities in the samples and the loading procedure made it valuable to measure the birefringence automatically as a small light spot scanned the crystal. It was found that the photoelastic effect is 2 orders of magnitude too small to account for the linear magnetic birefringence as a birefringence associated with the macroscopic magnetostrictive strain. The stress optical constant B (Δn/stress) in the magnetic crystals was found to be about −1.8×10−13 cm2/dyn for stress along 〈100〉, and −3.0×10−13 for stress along 〈111〉. Diamagnetic GdGaG has values for B of −1.2×10−13 and −3.0×10−13, respectively. It seems plausible then that the tensors describing the photoelastic and magneto-optic effects are not strongly coupled. The dispersion of the stress birefringence is very slight in the range 4000–10 000 cm−1, implying that the photoelastic effect arises from the remote transitions responsible for the refractive index.

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