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About Talks
& material Participants &
Program Photos
All presented talks are now online.
This workshop brings together
experimentalists, theorists and computational scientists from
academia and industry. Magnetism at surfaces and interfaces is
of continually increasing importance as size scale of
structures of greatest interest continues to decrease, and in
many cases dominates the magnetic properties. Interfaces are
wholly responsible for novel two-dimensional magnetism in
complex oxides, and surfaces and interfaces have bearing on the
materials properties of new magnetic systems such as
multiferroics (materials hosting both a permanent magnetism and
one or more other types of spontaneous ordering such as a
permanent electric polarization); on aspects of the classical
physics materials relevant to current applications (especially
thin magnetic films, spin dynamics, and nanomagnetic systems);
and on problems in quantum magnetism such as
quantum-fluctuation induced spin order and quantum tunneling of
magnetization.
The Magnetic North III workshop considers
the spectrum of experimental, theoretical and numerical
simulation approaches to the understanding of these phenomena.
How they are linked to the resulting magnetic characteristics
is a challenging goal of much of the current research in
magnetism. These efforts can reveal both potential new
technological applications and new physics.
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