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1.
Nature ; 405(6788): 767-9, 2000 Jun 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10866191

ABSTRACT

The arrangement of spins at interfaces in a layered magnetic material often has an important effect on the properties of the material. One example of this is the directional coupling between the spins in an antiferromagnet and those in an adjacent ferromagnet, an effect first discovered in 1956 and referred to as exchange bias. Because of its technological importance for the development of advanced devices such as magnetic read heads and magnetic memory cells, this phenomenon has received much attention. Despite extensive studies, however, exchange bias is still poorly understood, largely due to the lack of techniques capable of providing detailed information about the arrangement of magnetic moments near interfaces. Here we present polarization-dependent X-ray magnetic dichroism spectro-microscopy that reveals the micromagnetic structure on both sides of a ferromagnetic-antiferromagnetic interface. Images of thin ferromagnetic Co films grown on antiferromagnetic LaFeO3 show a direct link between the arrangement of spins in each material. Remanent hysteresis loops, recorded for individual ferromagnetic domains, show a local exchange bias. Our results imply that the alignment of the ferromagnetic spins is determined, domain by domain, by the spin directions in the underlying antiferromagnetic layer.

2.
Science ; 287(5455): 1014-6, 2000 Feb 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10669407

ABSTRACT

Antiferromagnetic domains in an epitaxial thin film, LaFeO(3) on SrTiO(3)(100), were observed using a high-spatial-resolution photoelectron emission microscope with contrast generated by the large x-ray magnetic linear dichroism effect at the multiplet-split L edge of Fe. The antiferromagnetic domains are linked to 90 degrees twinned crystallographic regions in the film. The Neel temperature of the thin film is reduced by 70 kelvin relative to the bulk material, and this reduction is attributed to epitaxial strain. These studies open the door for a microscopic understanding of the magnetic coupling across antiferromagnetic-ferromagnetic interfaces.

3.
Appl Opt ; 36(22): 5355-61, 1997 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18259354

ABSTRACT

A standard tandem triple-pass scanning Fabry-Perot interferometer of the Vernier type for applications in the near infrared is described. The Fabry-Perot etalons have been coated with a specially designed dielectric multilayer stack with low loss factors and a uniform reflectivity of (92.5 +/- 1.0)% between 730 and 860 nm. The performances of the instrument, such as resolution, total transmission, and contrast, are equivalent to conventional tandem Fabry-Perot spectrometers but over the whole near-infrared wavelength range. Applications of the system to Brillouin scattering on semiconductors in the transparent wavelength regime and high-resolution spectroscopy of vertical cavity surface-emitting lasers are given.

4.
J Voice ; 9(3): 249-60, 1995 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8541968

ABSTRACT

Two excerpts from the cadenza in Ardi gli incensi from Donizetti's opera Lucia di Lammermoor were acoustically analyzed for five recorded versions of the cadenza by Toti dal Monte, Maria Callas, Renata Scotto, Joan Sutherland, and Edita Gruberova. These acoustic parameters of the singing voices were correlated with preference and emotional expression judgments, based on pairwise comparisons, made by a group of experienced listener-judges. In addition to showing major differences in the voice quality of the five "dive" studied, the acoustic parameters suggested which vocal cues affect listener judgments. Two component scores, based on a factorial-dimensional analysis of the acoustic parameters, predicted 84% of the variance in the preference ratings.


Subject(s)
Affect , Speech Acoustics , Voice , Auditory Perception , Humans
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