1 Introduction
The pioneering work on ultrafast demagnetization in Ni[ Reference Beaurepaire, Merle, Daunois and Bigot1] paved the way towards a large number of theoretical and experimental studies on magnetization dynamics at femtosecond (fs) timescales induced by ultrashort laser pulses[ Reference Stanciu, Hansteen, Kimel, Kirilyuk, Tsukamoto, Itoh and Rasing2– Reference Zhang, Bai and George25]. In these studies the dynamics is mediated primarily by the electric field (E-field), which can excite non-equilibrium states[ Reference Tesařová, Nĕmec, Rozkotová, Zemen, Janda, Butkovičová, Trojánek, Olejník, Novák, Malý and Jungwirth5– Reference Davies, Janssen, Mentink, Tsukamoto, Kimel, van der Meer, Stupakiewicz and Kirilyuk9], demagnetize the sample[ Reference Beaurepaire, Merle, Daunois and Bigot1, Reference Bonetti, Hoffmann, Sher, Chen, Yang, Samant, Parkin and Dürr14– Reference Chekhov, Behovits, Heitz, Denker, Reiss, Wolf, Weinelt, Brouwer, Münzenberg and Kampfrath21], generate localized charge currents[ Reference Wätzel, Pavlyukh, Schäffer and Berakdar24, Reference Zhang, Bai and George25] or induce the inverse Faraday effect[ Reference Kimel, Kirilyuk, Usachev, Pisarev, Balbashov and Rasing22, Reference Hamamera, Guimarães, dos Santos Dias and Lounis23]. While most of the techniques are mediated mainly by the E-field, other techniques, such as the excitation of phononic modes[ Reference Stupakiewicz, Davies, Szerenos, Afanasiev, Rabinovich, Boris, Caviglia, Kimel and Kirilyuk26], have recently provided routes for non-thermal magnetization manipulation.
An appealing alternative to induce coherent magnetization dynamics consists of the use of magnetic fields (B-field). The role of the B-field in ultrafast magnetization dynamics has been extensively studied, especially in the regime of linear response to THz fields[ Reference Tudosa, Stamm, Kashuba, King, Siegmann, Stöhr, Ju, Lu and Weller27– Reference Choi, Jordan, Rudge and Speliotis32]. At this picosecond timescale, few teslas (T) are required to introduce small deflections from the equilibrium magnetization direction, while tens of teslas are needed for achieving complete switching. Higher driving frequencies, which could break into the femtosecond timescale, would require very high B-field amplitudes. Although intense magnetic fields can be achieved, for example, using plasmonic antennas[ Reference Yang, Mou, Gallas, Maitre, Coolen and Mivelle33], in such a regime, the associated E-field would potentially demagnetize the sample[ Reference Shalaby, Donges, Carva, Allenspach, Oppeneer, Nowak and Hauri34] or even damage it. In addition, although substantial advances have been made towards the generation of electromagnetic fields in the range of THz (0.1–30 THz), their intensity is still small as compared with the infrared case[ Reference Kampfrath, Battiato, Maldonado, Eilers, Nötzold, Mährlein, Zbarsky, Freimuth, Mokrousov, Blügel, Wolf, Radu, Oppeneer and Münzenberg35– Reference Seifert, Cheng, Wei, Kampfrath and Qi37].
In this work we introduce an appealing alternative to drive magnetization dynamics at the sub-picosecond timescale, by using isolated ultrafast intense B-fields. Recent developments in structured laser sources have demonstrated the possibility to spatially decouple the B-field from the E-field of an ultrafast laser pulse. For instance, azimuthally polarized laser beams present a longitudinal B-field at the beam axis, where the E-field is zero[ Reference Zhan38]. Depending on the laser beam parameters, the contrast between the longitudinal B-field and the radial B-field and the E-field can be adjusted, so as to design a local region in which the longitudinal B-field can be considered to be isolated from both the radial B-field and E-field[ Reference Blanco, Cambronero, Flores-Arias, Jarque, Plaja and Hernández-García39]. In such a region, the stochastic processes driven by the E-field could be avoided, and the coherent precession induced by the B-field can be exploited. Besides, only the longitudinal component of the B-field is present and, consequently, the magnetic field is linearly polarized. Indeed, azimuthally polarized laser beams have been shown to induce isolated millitesla static B-fields[ Reference Guclu, Veysi and Capolino40], with applications in nanoscale magnetic excitations and photoinduced force microscopy[ Reference Zeng, Huang, Guclu, Veysi, Albooyeh, Wickramasinghe and Capolino41, Reference Zeng, Darvishzadeh-Varcheie, Albooyeh, Rajaei, Kamandi, Veysi, Potma, Capolino and Wickramasinghe42]. More recently, ultrafast time-resolved magnetic circular dichroism has been proposed[ Reference Cao, Ye, He, Zheng and Mukamel43]. In addition, theoretical proposals[ Reference Blanco, Cambronero, Flores-Arias, Jarque, Plaja and Hernández-García39, Reference Sederberg, Kong, Hufnagel, Zhang, Karimi and Corkum44] and experiments[ Reference Sederberg, Kong and Corkum45, Reference Jana, Herperger, Kong, Mi, Zhang, Corkum and Sederberg46] have raised the possibility to generate isolated tesla-scale fs magnetic fields by the induction of large oscillating currents through azimuthally polarized fs laser beams.
Our theoretical study unveils the nonlinear, chiral, precessional magnetization response of a standard ferromagnet to a tesla-scale circularly polarized ultrafast magnetic field whose polarization plane contains the initial equilibrium magnetization. First, we show in Section 2 the feasibility to use state-of-the-art structured laser beams to create a macroscopic region in which such B-fields are found to be isolated from the E-field by particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations. It is worth mentioning that this circularly polarized B-field is a non-propagating solution that should not be confused with circularly polarized structured laser beams, such as those considered in Ref. [Reference Shi, Blackman and Arefiev47]. Then, we present our micromagnetic (μMag) simulations for moderate fields in Section 3, showing the presence of measurable magnetization dynamics in CoFeB when a circularly polarized $10$ ps B-field pulse of 10 T and central frequency 30 THz is applied. In addition, we compare the dynamics triggered by a B-field with linear polarization, circular polarization with the polarization plane perpendicular to the equilibrium magnetization and circular polarization with the polarization plane parallel to the equilibrium magnetization. Measurable magnetization dynamics are found in the latter case. In Section 4, we provide for a complete analytical model to describe such dynamics, and compare it with full μMag simulations. This model allows us to predict the complete magnetization switching by using 1 ps, 275 T, 60 THz B-field pulses, verified by full μMag simulations. Finally, Section 5 summarizes the main conclusions of the work and gives some perspectives on possible implications in the field.
2 Spatially isolated circularly polarized B-fields out of structured laser beams
In order to study the interaction of an isolated circularly polarized B-field with a standard ferromagnet (CoFeB), we consider a B-field, $\mathbf{B}$ , oscillating in the $xz$ plane (see Figure 1(a)) given by the following:
where $\omega$ is the central angular frequency ( $\omega =2\pi f$ ), ${B}_0$ is the amplitude and ${\theta}_0$ and ${\phi}_0$ define the relative amplitude and phase between the $x$ and $z$ components, respectively. Here, $F(t)$ is the field envelope, given by $F(t)={\sin}^2\left(\pi t/{T}_{\mathrm{p}}\right)$ for $0\le t\le {T}_{\mathrm{p}}$ , with ${T}_{\mathrm{p}}=3{t}_{\mathrm{p}}/8$ being its full duration and ${t}_{\mathrm{p}}$ being the full-width-at-half-maximum (FWHM) pulse duration in intensity. A right-handed, RCP (left-handed, LCP) circularly polarized B-field in the $xz$ plane corresponds to ${\phi}_0=\pi /2$ ( ${\phi}_0=-\pi /2$ ) and ${\theta}_0=\pi /4$ , while a linearly polarized B-field corresponds to ${\phi}_0=0$ or $\pi$ .
In our simulations, we do not include any E-field coupling, as the B-field is assumed to be isolated. Such an assumption is valid for CoFeB in spatial regions where the E-field is lower than $100\;\mathrm{MV}/\mathrm{m}$ , for which the demagnetization has been predicted to be less than $7\%$ [ Reference Bonetti, Hoffmann, Sher, Chen, Yang, Samant, Parkin and Dürr14, Reference Hudl, d’Aquino, Pancaldi, Yang, Samant, Parkin, Dürr, Serpico, Hoffmann and Bonetti48]. The conditions for which an intense circularly polarized B-field can be found spatially isolated from the E-field can be obtained by using two crossed azimuthally polarized laser beams, as sketched in Figure 1(b). We have performed PIC simulations using the OSIRIS 3D PIC code[ Reference Fonseca, Silva, Tsung, Decyk, Lu, Ren, Mori, Deng, Lee, Katsouleas and Adam49– Reference Fonseca, Vieira, Fiuza, Davidson, Tsung, Mori and Silva51], in order to show how such isolated B-fields can be achieved with the state-of-the-art ultrafast laser technology. We have considered two orthogonal azimuthally polarized laser beams with waist ${w}_0=3.125\lambda =31.25$ μm, central wavelength of $\lambda =10$ μm (30 THz) and E-field amplitude of 12.5 GV/m (peak intensity of 2.1 $\times {10}^{13}$ W/cm2) at their radius of maximum intensity, ${w}_0/\sqrt{2}$ . The temporal envelope is modeled as a sin2 function of 88.8 fs FWHM. Due to computational limitations the temporal envelope is much shorter than those considered in the μMag simulations presented in this work, which lies in the ps regime. However, we do not foresee any deviation in the results presented if longer pulses with similar amplitudes are considered.
In Figure 1(b) we also show the spatial distribution of the B-field (color background) and the E-field (contour lines) at the overlapping region. We have highlighted the region in which the E-field is lower than $100\;\mathrm{MV}/\mathrm{m}$ , and thus the E-field can be neglected against the B-field. Thus, we can define a region of radius $\simeq 100$ nm in which the B-field exhibits a constant amplitude of 10.5 T and the E-field is maintained below $100$ MV/m. Although the use of additional currents, like in Refs. [Reference Blanco, Cambronero, Flores-Arias, Jarque, Plaja and Hernández-García39,Reference Sederberg, Kong, Hufnagel, Zhang, Karimi and Corkum44], could enhance the B-field amplitude, our simulations demonstrate that moderately intense laser beams can already reach the B-field amplitudes required to observe the nonlinear magnetization dynamics described below.
3 Nonlinear magnetization response to ultrafast B-fields
The interaction between the oscillating B-field and the magnetization is given by the Landau–Lifshitz–Gilbert (LLG) equation[ Reference Vicario, Ruchert, Ardana-Lamas, Derlet, Tudu, Luning and Hauri29, Reference Wegrowe and Ciornei52]:
where $\mathbf{m}$ is the normalized magnetization where both spatial and temporal dependencies are implicitly assumed, $\alpha$ is the Gilbert damping parameter and ${\mathbf{B}}_{\mathrm{eff}}$ is the effective magnetic field. We have performed μMag simulations using the well-known software MuMax3[ Reference Vansteenkiste, Leliaert, Dvornik, Helsen, Garcia-Sanchez and Van Waeyenberge53] to solve the LLG equation. The system under study is sketched in Figure 1(a), where we consider a circular nanodot with $1\;\mathrm{nm}$ thickness and $64\;\mathrm{nm}$ diameter discretized into $1\;\mathrm{nm}$ cubic cells. The material parameters correspond to CoFeB grown over a heavy metal layer: inhomogeneous exchange parameter $A=19\;\mathrm{pJ}/\mathrm{m}$ , saturation magnetization ${M}_{\mathrm{S}}=1\;\mathrm{MA}/\mathrm{m}$ , perpendicular uniaxial anisotropy (i.e., the anisotropy field is directed along the $z$ direction) parameter ${K}_{\mathrm{u}}=800\;\mathrm{kJ}/{\mathrm{m}}^3$ , Dzyaloshinskii–Moriya interaction (DMI) $D=1.8\;\mathrm{mJ}/{\mathrm{m}}^2$ and Gilbert damping $\alpha =0.015$ .
In Figure 2(a) we show the in-plane magnetization dynamics (perpendicular to the equilibrium configuration, ${m}_z=1$ ) induced by RCP and LCP B-fields lying in the $xz$ plane. Note that the equilibrium magnetization lies in the polarization plane. In both cases, ${B}_0=10\;\mathrm{T}$ , $f=30\;\mathrm{THz}$ and ${t}_{\mathrm{p}}=10\;\mathrm{ps}$ . We can observe a magnetization precession around the $z$ -axis triggered by a nonlinear chiral response to the B-field. While the RCP B-field induces a measurable negative $x$ component, the LCP leads to a positive one. After the pulse, the precession dynamics is dominated by the anisotropy field, and the system starts to precess around the z-axis. Note that the broad trace is due to the subsequent magnetization oscillations during the interaction with the pulse.
The nonlinear mechanism underlying such behavior can be understood as follows (see the bottom part of Figure 2(a)). At an initial time $t=0$ , in which $\mathbf{m}$ (black arrow) lies in the polarization plane of the circularly polarized B-field (red arrow), being perpendicular to it, a transverse torque $\tau$ (green arrow) drives $\mathbf{m}$ out-of-plane from this initial position. During the next quarter-period, $\tau$ decreases and rotates, inducing a precession of $\mathbf{m}$ around its initial axis. For the second quarter-period, $\tau$ increases again keeping its rotation but, at $t=T/2$ , it reverses its rotation direction, thus sweeping only half of the plane perpendicular to $\mathbf{m}$ . As a result, along a whole period, the torque component perpendicular to the polarization plane averages to zero, while a residual contribution along the intersection of the polarization plane and the plane perpendicular to $\mathbf{m}$ remains. With long lasting multicycle laser pulses it is then possible to accumulate the small torque along the polar coordinate on the polarization plane, $\theta$ , so as to promote the system to a targeted non-equilibrium state. This is reflected in Figure 2(a), where the magnetization components ${m}_x$ and ${m}_y$ are non-zero at the end of the pulse, and therefore the magnetization is not aligned along the anisotropy direction, $z$ . A more detailed scheme of the nonlinear mechanism is displayed in Supplementary Videos 1 and 2 for both RCP and LCP B-fields, revealing the chiral nature of the reported effect.
To highlight the importance of the polarization state and orientation to get the nonlinear response, Figures 2(b) and 2(c) depict the temporal evolution of the magnetization components ( ${m}_x$ , ${m}_y$ ) obtained from full micromagnetic simulations for a linearly polarized B-field, being perpendicular to the equilibrium magnetization, and for a circularly polarized B-field (either RCP or LCP), where the polarization plane is perpendicular to the equilibrium magnetization. Whereas in both cases a small magnetization deflection is observed, the net torque exerted by the field on the magnetization over a period is null, and the magnetization recovers its equilibrium state after the B-field pulse. In addition, at frequencies larger than a few tens of THz, the response is not enough to promote a significant change in the magnetization even for a B-field as high as $B=10\;\mathrm{T}$ . Consequently, in the cases presented in Figures 2(b) and 2(c), the response is completely linear and the magnetization comes back to the initial configuration at the end of the B-field pulse. Nonetheless, for a circularly polarized B-field (either RCP or LCP) with the equilibrium magnetization lying in the polarization plane, the nonlinear chiral phenomenon described above triggers the magnetization out of equilibrium, as shown Figure 2(a). This dragging, being a nonlinear effect, is sensitive to the B-field envelope and does not cancel out at the end of the pulse.
4 Analytical model
To give insight into the nonlinear mechanism introduced in the previous section and sketched in Figure 2(a), we derive an approximated analytical model. The exchange field is not included in the model because we assume that the sample remains uniformly magnetized. In addition, we neglect the anisotropy and DMI fields – which are small if compared with the external one – and the damping term. Similar assumptions have been proven reasonable at this timescale in previous studies[ Reference Vicario, Ruchert, Ardana-Lamas, Derlet, Tudu, Luning and Hauri29]. With these approximations in Equation (3), the magnetization dynamics out of the polarization plane reads as follows:
with ${\mathbf{m}}_{\parallel }$ being the magnetization in the polarization plane and ${\gamma}^{\prime}=\gamma /\left(1+{\alpha}^2\right)$ . Considering the initial magnetization in the $z$ direction, ${m}_y$ at any time $t$ is given by the following:
The Cartesian components of the magnetization can be decomposed at each point in its Fourier components:
Using Equations (5) and (6) in the simplified LLG equation, we obtain the following:
Assuming that the magnetization components in the polarization plane, ${\mathbf{m}}_{q\pm 1}^{\parallel }$ , and the B-field envelope, $\mathbf{b}\left({t}\right)$ , evolve slowly, considering $\mathbf{b}(0)=0$ , and selecting only the slowly varying terms ( $q=0$ ), Equation (7) transforms into the following:
It is well known that the effective field dependence on the magnetization can lead to nonlinear effects[ Reference Hudl, d’Aquino, Pancaldi, Yang, Samant, Parkin, Dürr, Serpico, Hoffmann and Bonetti48, Reference Bertotti, Mayergoyz and Serpico54, Reference d’Aquino, Serpico, Bertotti, Mayergoyz and Bonin55]. However, it must be noticed that, differently from those cases, the described effect is nonlinear on the external field, not on the effective field. Moreover, it is proportional to the gyromagnetic ratio and the inverse of the frequency, being equivalent to a drift magnetic field ${\mathbf{B}_{\mathrm{d}}}$ , given by the following:
Using this definition, Equation (8) describes the slowly varying LLG dynamics in terms of the drift field, ${\mathbf{B}}_{\mathrm{d}}$ . Equations (8) and (9) constitute the main contribution of the present work, as they reveal a second-order dependency of the magnetization dynamics with the external B-field. From Equation (9) we can already infer that ${\mathbf{B}}_{\mathrm{d}}$ is maximal for circular polarization, decreases with the ellipticity and is zero for a linearly polarized B-field ( ${\phi}_0=0$ or $\pi$ ). Note also the chiral nature of the presented mechanism, as the direction of ${\mathbf{B}}_{\mathrm{d}}$ is helicity dependent. Finally, we stress the purely precessional nature of ${\mathbf{B}}_{\mathrm{d}}$ – being linear with the gyromagnetic ratio – and its inverse proportionality with the driving frequency. It is worth noting that a small misalignment of the azimuthally polarized laser beams would convert the circularly polarized magnetic field into an elliptically polarized magnetic field, and/or would introduce a small angle between the initial magnetization and the polarization plane. Nonetheless, it is possible to decompose the total magnetic field into a circularly polarized magnetic field in the $xz$ plane and a linearly polarized magnetic field in the $y$ direction. However, this latter component would not affect the slow dynamics presented here.
We now analyze the dependency of the magnetization dynamics on the B-field, both with the analytical model represented by Equation (8) and the full micromagnetic simulations, where all the interactions on the effective field, as well as the damping, are included. To highlight the accuracy of our model based on the equivalent drift field, we compare the total rotation of the magnetization from our simulations with the magnetization rotation induced by the drift B-field, ${\mathbf{B}}_{\mathrm{d}}$ , which can be computed as follows:
Figure 3 presents the induced magnetization rotation as derived from the analytical model (solid lines) and the micromagnetic simulations (dots). The excellent agreement allows us to validate our model and demonstrate the reported nonlinear chiral effect. Firstly, Figure 3(a) shows the total rotation of the magnetization as a function of the polarization state (characterized by ${\phi}_0$ ) of an external B-field of ${t}_{\mathrm{p}}=3$ ps, for amplitudes of 60 T (blue), 100 T (red) and 140 T (black). Our simulations confirm no rotation for a linearly polarized B-field, and a maximum rotation for circular polarization. The chiral character of the phenomenon is also evidenced.
Figure 3(b) depicts the inverse dependency of the magnetization rotation with the B-field frequency. This frequency scaling suggests that the nonlinear induced rotation is particularly relevant for external B-fields at THz frequencies. However, note that the linear dynamics (with the external field) would also contribute at those frequencies. Figure 3(c) shows the second-order scaling of the magnetization dynamics with the external B-field amplitude for central frequencies of 250 THz (blue), 100 THz (red) and 50 THz (black). As expected, the total rotation increases with the B-field amplitude, being already measurable at tens of teslas. Finally, Figure 3(d) depicts the total rotation of the magnetization for a B-field pulse of frequency $50\;\mathrm{THz}$ as a function of the pulse duration, ${t}_{\mathrm{p}}$ . This latter result confirms that the nonlinear chiral effect presented in this work is cumulative in time, as predicted from Equation (10).
One of the most appealing opportunities of this nonlinear effect is the possibility to achieve non-thermal ultrafast all-optical switching driven solely by an external circularly polarized B-field. Based on the dependencies presented in Figure 3, we show in Figure 4 two different micromagnetic simulation results in which switching is achieved through the use of an RCP B-field pulse. The B-field envelopes of each case are represented with dashed red lines, whereas the magnetization components ${m}_x$ , ${m}_y$ , ${m}_z$ are represented with blue, yellow and black, respectively. The first case makes use of a short, 1 ps, 60 THz, 275 T B-field pulse, whereas the second case uses a 10 ps B-field pulse of 60 T and 30 THz. In both cases the ${m}_z$ component reverses its direction along the course of the pulse, showing that complete switching at the fs or ps timescale can be achieved, depending on the strength, pulse duration and frequency of the B-field.
5 Discussion
Our results unveil a nonlinear chiral magnetic effect driven by ultrafast circularly (or elliptically) polarized B-field pulses, lying in the plane containing the initial magnetization. This purely precessional effect is quadratic in the external B-field, and proportional to the inverse of the frequency, being equivalent to a drift field that depends linearly on the gyromagnetic ratio. This nonlinearity is proved to be essential at this timescale, since a linear response would follow adiabatically the magnetic field and, consequently, would restore the magnetization to its initial state after the pulse is gone. Conversely, the reported drift field plays a significant role in the magnetization dynamics driven by moderately intense circularly-polarized B-fields – tens of teslas at the ps timescale, and hundreds of teslas at the fs timescale. Although we have studied the magnetization dynamics in CoFeB, this effect is a general feature of the LLG equation, thus being present in all ferromagnets, but also in ferrimagnets and antiferromagnets. In addition, this rectification effect may be exploited to generate THz electric currents via the inverse spin Hall effect, which would emit electromagnetic THz radiation[ Reference Seifert, Cheng, Wei, Kampfrath and Qi37] when illuminated with infrared light.
In addition, it should be stressed that, even when the E-field is non-negligible, the reported nonlinear mechanism on the B-field may play a role, so a complete study of the ultrafast magnetization dynamics would require taking into account this effect. We note that recent works pointed out the need to include nutation in the dynamical equation of the magnetization[ Reference Wegrowe and Ciornei52, Reference Ciornei, Rub and Wegrowe56, Reference Neeraj, Awari, Kovalev, Polley, Hagström, Arekapudi, Semisalova, Lenz, Green, Deinert, Ilyakov, Chen, Bawatna, Scalera, d’Aquino, Serpico, Hellwig, Wegrowe, Gensch and Bonetti57]. This term could also lead to second-order effects. Thus, our work serves as a first step towards the investigation of higher-order phenomena induced by magnetic inertia, potentially leading to even shorter timescale magnetization switching.
Finally, our work demonstrates that the recently developed scenario of spatially isolated fs B-fields[ Reference Blanco, Cambronero, Flores-Arias, Jarque, Plaja and Hernández-García39, Reference Sederberg, Kong, Hufnagel, Zhang, Karimi and Corkum44– Reference Jana, Herperger, Kong, Mi, Zhang, Corkum and Sederberg46] opens the path to the ultrafast manipulation of magnetization dynamics by purely precessional effects, avoiding thermal effects due to the E-field or magnetization damping. Although the spatial decoupling of the intense B-field from the E-field using fs structured pulses is technologically challenging, it is granted by the rapid development of intense ultrafast laser sources, from the infrared (800 nm, 375 THz) to the mid-infrared (4–40 μm, 75–77 THz)[ Reference Shumakova, Malevich, Ališauskas, Voronin, Zheltikov, Faccio, Kartashov, Baltuška and Pugzlys58– Reference Elu, Maidment, Vámos, Tani, Novoa, Frosz, Badikov, Badikov, Petrov, Russell and Biegert60]. Thinking forward, we believe that our work paves the way towards induced all-optical magnetization dynamics at even shorter timescales, towards the sub-femtosecond regime. Recent works in the generation of ultrafast structured pulses in high-order harmonic generation[ Reference Hernández-García, Turpin, Román, Picón, Drevinskas, Cerkauskaite, Kazansky, Durfee and Sola61– Reference de las Heras, Pandey, Román, Serrano, Baynard, Dovillaire, Pittman, Durfee, Plaja, Kazamias, Guilbaud and Hernández-García63] may open the route towards such ultrafast control.
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program (Grant Agreement No. 851201, ATTOSTRUCTURA); the Ministerio de Ciencia de Innovación y Universidades (PID2020-117024GB-C41, PID2019-106910GB-I00, RYC-2017-22745); and the Junta de Castilla y León FEDER (SA287P18).
Supplementary Material
To view supplementary material for this article, please visit http://doi.org/10.1017/hpl.2023.71.