Researchers See 'Spin Current' in Motion for the First Time

Researchers see 'spin current' in motion for the first time

Written bySLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
| 3 min read
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Researchers at the Department of Energy’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory have for the first time seen a spin current – an inherent magnetic property common to all electrons – as it travels across materials. The result, which revealed a surprising loss of current along the way, is an important step toward realizing a next-generation breed of electronics known as “spintronics.”

Modern computing relies on the precise control of electric charges that zip around from component to component in labyrinth-like channels in semiconductors. Spintronics could change that by tapping electrons’ spin, which can be thought of as having an “up” or “down” orientation, rather than their charge.

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