Publication | Closed Access
X-ray optical activity and the Faraday effect in cobalt and its compounds
129
Citations
15
References
1990
Year
Optical MaterialsX-ray SpectroscopyEngineeringMagnetic ResonanceThin SampleChemistryOptical RotationsSynchrotron Radiation SourceX-ray ImagingMagnetismCobalt Metallic GlassX-ray Optical ActivityOptical PropertiesX-ray TechnologyMaterials SciencePhysicsSynchrotron RadiationX-ray Free-electron LaserPolarization ImagingCrystallographyNatural SciencesSpectroscopyX-ray DiffractionApplied PhysicsFaraday EffectX-ray Optic
Rotation of the plane of polarization following transmission of a synchrotron x-ray beam through a thin sample has been directly observed. Within a few eV of the cobalt K-absorption edge, rotations of up to 2 mrad were obtained in cubic ${\mathrm{Co}}_{0.9}$${\mathrm{Fe}}_{0.1}$, and somewhat less in a cobalt metallic glass and in chiral organometallic samples. These effects were observed using a high-extinction tunable perfect-crystal Bragg-reflection x-ray polarimeter of novel design which can detect optical rotations as small as 70 \ensuremath{\mu}rad.
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