Seminar-Peter Wahl
18/05/2011 15:00 (Seminarni mistnost budova A) »more info
Our paper published in PRL May 2011
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Colloquium - R. Moeller
28/04/2011 15:00 (Seminarni mistnost budova A) »more info
Colloquium - A. Heinrich
21/03/2011 15:00 (Seminarni mistnost budova A) »more info
Seminar - Petr Klapetek
14/02/2011 14:00 (Zasedaci mistnost budova B) »more info
Seminar - Guy Le Lay
11/02/2011 11:00 (Seminarni mistnost budova A) »more info
Our paper published in PRL Jan 2011
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Seminar András Berkó
15/11/2010 15:00 (Seminarni mistnost budova A) »more info
Seminar Martin Svec
14/11/2010 15:00 (Seminarni mistnost budova A) »more info
2nd QPlus workshop 8/10/10
2nd International QPlus Workshop 8.10.2010 »more info
Seminar Y. J. Dappe 25/5/10
25/5/2010 10:00 (Seminarni mistnost budova A) »more info
Seminar J. Repp 13/4/2010
14/3/2010 15:00 (Seminarni mistnost budova A) »more info
Seminar T. Novotny 2/3/2010
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Seminar R. Martonak 23/2/10
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4/2/10 Colloquium S. Lindsay
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18/1/10 Our work highlighted on Nanotech.org website.
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30/12/09 Our paper about atomic contrast of KPFM published in PRL
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Seminar J.P. Lewis 9/12/09 14:00
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Seminar P. Kocan 25/11/09 15:00
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14.-15.10. 2009 workshop "Simultaneous STM/AFM measurements using tuning fork based sensors"
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Probing the energetics and dynamics of individual atomic spins on surfaces
Andreas Heinrich
IBM Almaden Laboratory, USA
The scanning tunneling microscope has been an extremely successful experimental tool because of its atomic scale spatial resolution. In recent years this has been combined with the use of low temperatures, culminating in microvolt energy resolution. However the time resolution of typical STM experiments is limited to about one millisecond for spectroscopy on a single atom. In this talk we will discuss the use of inelastic tunneling spectroscopy with low-temperature STM for the study of spins, a technique coined spin-excitation spectroscopy. With this approach it is possible to measure the energy eigenstates of the quantum spin Hamiltonian that describes spins on surfaces with very high precision. We will briefly discuss its application to the measurement of the Zeeman energy and to magneto-crystalline anisotropy. We will focus on a new way of achieving fast time resolution based on an all-electrical pump probe spectroscopy. In this approach, a strong voltage pulse applied between tip and sample drives a spin out of thermal equilibrium (the pump pulse) [Nature Physics 6, 340 (2010)]. A short time later (typically a few nanoseconds) a smaller voltage pulse (the probe pulse) is applied which probes the state of the system. I will demonstrate this technique for the measurement of the spin relaxation time of individual magnetic atoms [Science 329, 1628 (2010)] and chains of atoms on a surface.