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Insight on Hole-Hole Interaction and Magnetic Order from Dichroic Auger-Photoelectron Coincidence Spectra

Authors :
Roberto Gotter
Alessandro Ruocco
Enrico Perfetto
Michele Cini
Giovanni Stefani
Francesco Offi
Cini, M
Perfetto, E
Gotter, R
Offi, Francesco
Ruocco, Alessandro
Stefani, Giovanni
Source :
Physical review letters 107 (2011): 217602-1–217602-5. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.107.217602, info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:M. Cini, E. Perfetto, R. Gotter, F. Offi, A. Ruocco, G. Stefani/titolo:Insight on Hole-Hole Interaction and Magnetic Order from Dichroic Auger-Photoelectron Coincidence Spectra/doi:10.1103%2FPhysRevLett.107.217602/rivista:Physical review letters/anno:2011/pagina_da:217602-1/pagina_a:217602-5/intervallo_pagine:217602-1–217602-5/volume:107
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
American Physical Society (APS), 2011.

Abstract

The absence of sharp structures in the core-valence-valence Auger line shapes of partially filled bands has severely limited the use of electron spectroscopy in magnetic crystals and other correlated materials. Here by a novel interplay of experimental and theoretical techniques we achieve a combined understanding of the Photoelectron, Auger %$M_{23}M_{45}M_{45}$ and Auger-Photoelectron Coincidence Spectra (APECS) of CoO. This is a prototype antiferromagnetic material in which the recently discovered Dichroic Effect in Angle Resolved (DEAR) APECS reveals a complex pattern in the strongly correlated Auger line shape. A calculation of the \textit{unrelaxed} spectral features explains the pattern in detail, labeling the final states by the total spin. The present theoretical analysis shows that the dichroic effect arises from a spin-dependence of the angular distribution of the photoelectron-Auger electron pair detected in coincidence, and from the selective power of the dichroic technique in assigning different weights to the various spin components. Since the spin-dependence of the angular distribution exists in the antiferromagnetic state but vanishes at the N\'eel temperature, the DEAR-APECS technique detects the phase transition from its local effects, thus providing a unique tool to observe and understand magnetic correlations in such circumstances, where the usual methods (neutron diffraction, specific heat measurements) are not applicable.<br />Comment: Accepted by: Physical Review Letters

Details

ISSN :
10797114 and 00319007
Volume :
107
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Physical Review Letters
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....537f942175c8cb5d1929616dadaede54
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevlett.107.217602