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    Ultrafast Structural Changes in Chiral Molecules Measured with Free-Electron Lasers
    (Bristol : IOP Publ., 2020) Schmidt, P.; Music, V.; Hartmann, G.; Boll, R.; Erk, B.; Bari, S.; Allum, F.; Baumann, T.M.; Brenner, G.; Brouard, M.; Burt, M.; Coffee, R.; Dörner, S.; Galler, A.; Grychtol, P.; Heathcote, D.; Inhester, L.; Kazemi, M.; Larsson, M.; Li, Z.; Lutmann, A.; Manschwetus, B.; Marder, L.; Mason, R.; Moeller, S.; Osipov, T.; Otto, H.; Passow, C.; Rolles, D.; Rupprecht, P.; Schubert, K.; Schwob, L.; Thomas, R.; Vallance, C.; Von Korff Schmising, C.; Wagner, R.; Walter, P.; Wolf, T.J.A.; Zhaunerchyk, V.; Meyer, M.; Ehresmann, A.; Knie, A.; Demekhin, P.V.; Ilchen, M.
    (X-ray) free-electron lasers are employed to site specifically interrogate atomic fragments during ultra-fast photolysis of chiral molecules via time-resolved photoelectron circular dichroism. © 2020 Institute of Physics Publishing. All rights reserved.
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    Hyper-domains in exchange bias micro-stripe pattern
    (Milton Park : Taylor & Francis, 2008) Theis-Bröhl, K.; Westphalen, A.; Zabel, H.; Rücker, U.; McCord, J.; Höink, V.; Schmalhorst, J.; Reiss, G.; Weis, T.; Engel, D.; Ehresmann, A.; Toperverg, B.P.
    A combination of experimental techniques, e.g. vector-MOKE magnetometry, Kerr microscopy and polarized neutron reflectometry, was applied to study the field induced evolution of the magnetization distribution over a periodic pattern of alternating exchange bias (EB) stripes. The lateral structure is imprinted into a continuous ferromagnetic/antiferromagnetic EB bilayer via laterally selective exposure to He-ion irradiation in an applied field. This creates an alternating frozen-in interfacial EB field competing with the external field in the course of the re-magnetization. It was found that in a magnetic field applied at an angle with respect to the EB axis parallel to the stripes the re-magnetization process proceeds via a variety of different stages. They include coherent rotation of magnetization towards the EB axis, precipitation of small random (ripple) domains, formation of a stripe-like alternation of the magnetization, and development of a state in which the magnetization forms large hyper-domains comprising a number of stripes. Each of those magnetic states is quantitatively characterized via the comprehensive analysis of data on specular and off-specular polarized neutron reflectivity. The results are discussed within a phenomenological model containing a few parameters, which can readily be controlled by designing systems with a desired configuration of magnetic moments of micro- and nano-elements.
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    Photon-electron coincidence experiments at synchrotron radiation facilities with arbitrary bunch modes
    ([S.l.] : American Institute of Physics, 2021) Ozga, C.; Honisch, C.; Schmidt, P.; Holzapfel, X.; Zindel, C.; Küstner-Wetekam, C.; Richter, C.; Hergenhahn, U.; Ehresmann, A.; Knie, A.; Hans, A.
    We report the adaptation of an electron–photon coincidence detection scheme to the multibunch hybrid mode of the synchrotron radiation source BESSY II (Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin). Single-event-based data acquisition and evaluation, combined with the use of relative detection times between the coincident particles, enable the acquisition of proper coincidence signals from a quasi-continuous excitation pattern. The background signal produced by accidental coincidences in the time difference representation is modeled using the non-coincident electron and photon spectra. We validate the method by reproducing previously published results, which were obtained in the single bunch mode, and illustrate its usability for the multibunch hybrid mode by investigating the photoionization of CO2 into CO+2 B satellite states, followed by subsequent photon emission. The radiative lifetime obtained and the electron binding energy are in good agreement with earlier publications. We expect this method to be a useful tool to extend the versatility of coincident particle detection to arbitrary operation modes of synchrotron radiation facilities and other excitation sources without the need for additional experimental adjustments.