Researchers flip ferromagnet polarity using laser beam

Scientists at the University of Basel and ETH Zurich have reversed the polarity of a specialized ferromagnet with a focused laser beam, without heating the material. This achievement, detailed in Nature, combines electron interactions, topology, and dynamical control in a single experiment. The method hints at future light-based electronic circuits on chips.

Ferromagnets rely on aligned electron spins to create stable magnetic fields, a process that typically requires heating above a critical temperature to reverse polarity. However, a team led by Prof. Dr. Tomasz Smoleński at the University of Basel and Prof. Dr. Ataç Imamoğlu at ETH Zurich has demonstrated a heat-free alternative using laser light.

The researchers employed a material consisting of two atomically thin layers of molybdenum ditelluride, stacked with a slight twist to induce unusual electronic properties. This structure allows electrons to form topological states, which resist smooth transformation like the difference between a ball and a doughnut. In these states, whether insulating or metallic, electron interactions align spins into a ferromagnetic configuration.

By applying a laser pulse, the team changed the collective spin orientation, achieving a permanent switch. "Our main result is that we can use a laser pulse to change the collective orientation of the spins," noted Olivier Huber, a PhD student at ETH Zurich who conducted measurements alongside Kilian Kuhlbrodt and Tomasz Smoleński. The topology affected the switching dynamics, and the laser also enabled creation of internal boundaries for topological ferromagnetic regions.

Polarity reversal was verified by analyzing light reflected from a second, weaker laser beam, confirming the spin reorientation in the micrometer-scale ferromagnet. "What's exciting about our work is that we combine the three big topics in modern condensed matter physics in a single experiment: strong interactions between the electrons, topology and dynamical control," Imamoğlu explained.

The findings appear in Nature under the title "Optical control over topological Chern number in moiré materials," with authors including O. Huber, K. Kuhlbrodt, and others (DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-09851-w). Smoleński envisions using this to optically write adaptable topological circuits on chips, potentially for precision sensing like miniature interferometers detecting small electromagnetic fields.

Makala yanayohusiana

Researchers at Japan's RIKEN Center for Emergent Matter Science have pioneered a method to carve three-dimensional nanoscale devices from single crystals using focused ion beams. By shaping helical structures from a magnetic crystal, they created switchable diodes that direct electricity preferentially in one direction. This geometric approach could enable more efficient electronics.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Researchers at Florida State University have created a novel crystalline material that exhibits complex swirling magnetic behaviors not found in its parent compounds. By blending two structurally mismatched but chemically similar materials, the team induced atomic spins to form skyrmion-like textures. This breakthrough, detailed in the Journal of the American Chemical Society, could advance data storage and quantum technologies.

Researchers have uncovered a straightforward explanation for unusual magnetoresistance in spintronics, challenging the dominant spin Hall magnetoresistance theory. The effect stems from electron scattering at material interfaces influenced by magnetization and electric fields. This discovery, detailed in recent experiments, offers a unified model without relying on spin currents.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Researchers have developed an ultrafast laser technique that fires light pulses in one billionth of a second, enabling the creation of structures 1,000 times stronger and 1,000 times faster. This novel method targets thermal conductivity in chips by controlling phonon scattering distances, offering applications in high-performance computing, quantum devices, and AI chip cooling. It changes how chips handle heat without relying on fans or liquid cooling.

Jumatatu, 2. Mwezi wa tatu 2026, 14:35:17

NYU scientists use light to control crystal formation

Jumapili, 1. Mwezi wa tatu 2026, 05:49:05

Scientists make light mimic quantum hall effect

Jumatatu, 16. Mwezi wa pili 2026, 15:09:20

Quantum experiment reverses heat flow in qubits

Ijumaa, 6. Mwezi wa pili 2026, 19:15:42

Physicists observe superfluid freezing into supersolid state

Jumapili, 1. Mwezi wa pili 2026, 09:22:13

Scientists observe quantum geometry bending electrons like gravity

Alhamisi, 22. Mwezi wa kwanza 2026, 23:03:12

Researchers discover spin size flips Kondo effect

Alhamisi, 22. Mwezi wa kwanza 2026, 22:55:02

Researchers unlock efficient shortcut to quantum materials

Alhamisi, 8. Mwezi wa kwanza 2026, 22:57:50

Quantum system defies heating rules in laser experiment

Jumatano, 17. Mwezi wa kumi na mbili 2025, 11:17:47

Scientists solve decades-old quantum mystery in spin liquid

Alhamisi, 11. Mwezi wa kumi na mbili 2025, 19:42:26

Researchers discover stationary atoms in molten metals

 

 

 

Tovuti hii inatumia vidakuzi

Tunatumia vidakuzi kwa uchambuzi ili kuboresha tovuti yetu. Soma sera ya faragha yetu kwa maelezo zaidi.
Kataa