4.6 Article

Magnomechanical backaction corrections due to coupling to higher-order Walker modes and Kerr nonlinearities

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW B
Volume 107, Issue 14, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.107.144411

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The radiation pressurelike coupling between magnons and phonons in magnets can modify the phonon frequency and decay rate. In a recent experiment, the coupling of the uniform magnon mode to a microwave cavity was demonstrated, but deviations from the predicted decay rate were observed. In this work, corrections due to magnetic Kerr nonlinearities and the coupling of phonons to additional magnon modes were considered, and excellent agreement with experimental data was obtained.
The radiation pressurelike coupling between magnons and phonons in magnets can modify the phonon frequency (magnomechanical spring effect) and decay rate (magnomechanical decay) via dynamical backaction. Such effects have been recently observed by coupling the uniform magnon mode of a magnetic sphere (the Kittel mode) to a microwave cavity. In particular, the ability to evade backaction effects was demonstrated [C. A. Potts et al., Phys. Rev. B 107, L140405 (2023)], a requisite for applications such as magnomechanical-based thermometry. However, deviations were observed from the predicted magnomechanical decay rate within the standard theoretical model. In this work, we account for these deviations by considering corrections due to (i) magnetic Kerr nonlinearities and (ii) the coupling of phonons to additional magnon modes. Provided that such additional modes couple weakly to the driven cavity, our model yields a correction proportional to the average Kittel magnon mode occupation. We focus our results on magnetic spheres, where we show that the magnetostatic Walker modes couple to the relevant mechanical modes as efficiently as the Kittel mode. Our model yields excellent agreement with the experimental data.

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