We present a combined experimental and theoretical study of spin–orbit-induced spin splittings in the unoccupied surface electronic structure of the prototypical Rashba system Au(111). Spin- and angle-resolved inverse-photoemission measurements reveal a Rashba-type spin splitting in the unoccupied part of the L-gap surface state. With increasing momentum parallel to the surface, the spectral intensity is lowered and the spin splitting vanishes as the surface state approaches the band-gap boundary. Furthermore, we observe significantly spin-dependent peak positions and intensities for transitions between unoccupied sp-like bulk bands. Possible reasons for this behavior are considered: initial and final-state effects as well as the transition...
Spin-split energy band structure appears in the surface state due to a broken space inversion symmet...
The search in two-dimensional condensed matter systems of Rashba-type spin-polarized electronic stat...
This work was supported by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, UK (grant nos. EP...
We report on a combined low-temperature scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS), angle-resolved photoe...
We report on the measurement of the Rashba-type spin splitting of the Shockley surface state on Cu(1...
The well-known experimentally observed sp-derived Au(111) Shockley surface states with Rashba spin s...
α-GeTe(111) is a noncentrosymmetric ferroelectric material for which a strong spin-orbit interaction...
Recent studies on the Rashba effect on surfaces are reviewed. The Rashba effect refers to the k-depe...
We present Angle-Resolved Photoelectron Spectroscopy (ARPES) data on spin-orbit split states in two ...
Identifikace bulkových a povrchových Rashba stavů v ferroelektrickém GeTeMacroscopic ferroelectric o...
Spin-split energy band structure appears in the surface state due to a broken space inversion symmet...
Available online 14 October 2014In this review article, after a brief account of the early history o...
The breaking of bulk inversion symmetry in ferroelectric semiconductors causes a Rashba type spin sp...
Surface states, that show a k-dependent splitting resulting from spin–orbit coupling, show wide simi...
Spin-orbit interaction (SOI) in low-dimensional systems, namely Rashba systems and the edge states o...
Spin-split energy band structure appears in the surface state due to a broken space inversion symmet...
The search in two-dimensional condensed matter systems of Rashba-type spin-polarized electronic stat...
This work was supported by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, UK (grant nos. EP...
We report on a combined low-temperature scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS), angle-resolved photoe...
We report on the measurement of the Rashba-type spin splitting of the Shockley surface state on Cu(1...
The well-known experimentally observed sp-derived Au(111) Shockley surface states with Rashba spin s...
α-GeTe(111) is a noncentrosymmetric ferroelectric material for which a strong spin-orbit interaction...
Recent studies on the Rashba effect on surfaces are reviewed. The Rashba effect refers to the k-depe...
We present Angle-Resolved Photoelectron Spectroscopy (ARPES) data on spin-orbit split states in two ...
Identifikace bulkových a povrchových Rashba stavů v ferroelektrickém GeTeMacroscopic ferroelectric o...
Spin-split energy band structure appears in the surface state due to a broken space inversion symmet...
Available online 14 October 2014In this review article, after a brief account of the early history o...
The breaking of bulk inversion symmetry in ferroelectric semiconductors causes a Rashba type spin sp...
Surface states, that show a k-dependent splitting resulting from spin–orbit coupling, show wide simi...
Spin-orbit interaction (SOI) in low-dimensional systems, namely Rashba systems and the edge states o...
Spin-split energy band structure appears in the surface state due to a broken space inversion symmet...
The search in two-dimensional condensed matter systems of Rashba-type spin-polarized electronic stat...
This work was supported by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, UK (grant nos. EP...