We show that the magnetization of a thin ferromagnetic (Ga,Mn)As layer can be modulated by picosecond acoustic pulses. In this approach a picosecond strain pulse injected into the structure induces a tilt of the magnetization vector M, followed by the precession of M around its equilibrium orientation. This effect can be understood in terms of changes in magnetocrystalline anisotropy induced by the pulse. A model where only one anisotropy constant is affected by the strain pulse provides a good description of the observed time-dependent response.
The bias voltage applied to a weakly coupled n-doped GaAs/AlAs superlattice increases the amplitude of the coherent hypersound oscillations generated by a femtosecond optical pulse. This bias-induced amplitude increase and experimentally observed spectral narrowing of the superlattice phonon mode with a frequency 441 GHz provides the evidence for hypersound amplification by stimulated emission of phonons in a system where the inversion of the electron populations for phonon-assisted transitions exists.
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