Abstract

We systematically study the fluence dependence of the resonant scattering cross-section from magnetic domains in Co/Pd-based multilayers. Samples are probed with single extreme ultraviolet (XUV) pulses of femtosecond duration tuned to the Co M_{3,2} absorption resonances using the FERMI@Elettra free-electron laser. We report quantitative data over 3 orders of magnitude in fluence, covering 16 mJ/cm^{2}/pulse to 10 000 mJ/cm^{2}/pulse with pulse lengths of 70fs and 120fs. A progressive quenching of the diffraction cross-section with fluence is observed. Compression of the same pulse energy into a shorter pulse-implying an increased XUV peak electric field-results in a reduced quenching of the resonant diffraction at the Co M_{3,2} edge. We conclude that the quenching effect observed for resonant scattering involving the short-lived Co 3p core vacancies is noncoherent in nature. This finding is in contrast to previous reports investigating resonant scattering involving the longer-lived Co 2p states, where stimulated emission has been found to be important. A phenomenological model based on XUV-induced ultrafast demagnetization is able to reproduce our entire set of experimental data and is found to be consistent with independent magneto-optical measurements of the demagnetization dynamics on the same samples.

Highlights

  • We systematically study the fluence dependence of the resonant scattering cross-section from magnetic domains in Co/Pd-based multilayers

  • Samples are probed with single extreme ultraviolet (XUV) pulses of femtosecond duration tuned to the Co M3;2 absorption resonances using the FERMI@Elettra free-electron laser

  • This finding is in contrast to previous reports investigating resonant scattering involving the longer-lived Co 2p states, where stimulated emission has been found to be important

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Summary

Introduction

We systematically study the fluence dependence of the resonant scattering cross-section from magnetic domains in Co/Pd-based multilayers. Which of the different mechanisms dominates will depend on experimental parameters such as the pulse duration, coherence time, and fluence distribution, as well as material-dependent properties like the demagnetization time constant or the respective core-hole lifetime.

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