Electric fields represent an ideal means for controlling spins at the nanoscale and, more specifically, for manipulating protected degrees of freedom in multispin systems. Here we perform low-temperature magnetic far-IR spectroscopy on a molecular spin triangle (Fe) and provide initial experimental evidence suggesting spin-electric transitions in polynuclear complexes. The co-presence of electric- and magnetic-dipole transitions, allows us to estimate the spin-electric coupling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFModulation-doped CdTe quantum wells (QWs) with CdMgTe barriers were studied by photoluminescence (PL) and far-infrared Fourier spectroscopy under a magnetic field at 4.2 K and by Raman spectroscopy at room temperature. Two samples were tested: a sample which contained ten QWs (MQW) and a sample with one QW (SQW).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOptical response of crystalline solids is to a large extent driven by excitations that promote electrons among individual bands. This allows one to apply optical and magneto-optical methods to determine experimentally the energy band gap -a fundamental property crucial to our understanding of any solid-with a great precision. Here it is shown that such conventional methods, applied with great success to many materials in the past, do not work in topological Dirac semimetals with a dispersive nodal line.
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