International
Tables for
Crystallography
Volume D
Physical properties of crystals
Edited by A. Authier

International Tables for Crystallography (2013). Vol. D. ch. 1.11, pp. 275-280

Section 1.11.6. Resonant atomic factors: multipole expansion

V. E. Dmitrienko,a* A. Kirfelb and E. N. Ovchinnikovac

a A. V. Shubnikov Institute of Crystallography, Leninsky pr. 59, Moscow 119333, Russia,bSteinmann Institut der Universität Bonn, Poppelsdorfer Schloss, Bonn, D-53115, Germany, and cFaculty of Physics, M. V. Lomonosov Moscow State University, Leninskie Gory, Moscow 119991, Russia
Correspondence e-mail:  [email protected]

1.11.6. Resonant atomic factors: multipole expansion

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Strong enhancement of resonant scattering occurs when the energy of the incident radiation gets close to the energy of an electron transition from an inner shell to an empty state (be it localized or not) above the Fermi level. There are two widely used approaches for calculating resonant atomic amplitudes. One uses Cartesian, the other spherical (polar) coordinates, and both have their own advantages and disadvantages. Supposing in (1.11.4.3)link to equationMathematical equationand using the expression for the velocity matrix element Mathematical symbol (Berestetskii et al., 1982link to reference) Mathematical symbol, it is possible to present the resonant part of the atomic factor (1.11.4.3)link to equation asMathematical equationwhere Mathematical symbol, Mathematical symbol is a dimensionless tensor corresponding to the dipole–dipole Mathematical symbol contribution, Mathematical symbol is the dipole–quadrupole Mathematical symbol contribution and Mathematical symbol is the quadrupole–quadrupole Mathematical symbol term. All the tensors are complex and depend on the energy and the local properties of the medium. The expansion (1.11.6.1)link to equation over the wavevectors is possible near X-ray absorption edges because the products Mathematical symbol are small for the typical sizes of the inner shells involved. In resonant X-ray absorption and scattering, the contribution of the magnetic multipole Mathematical symbol transitions is usually much less than that of the electric multipole Mathematical symbol transitions. Nevertheless, the scattering amplitude corresponding to Mathematical symbol events has also been considered (Collins et al., 2007link to reference). The tensors Mathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol describe the spatial dispersion effects similar to those in visible optics.

1.11.6.1. Tensor atomic factors: internal symmetry

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Different types of tensors transform under the action of the extended orthogonal group (Sirotin & Shaskolskaya, 1982link to reference) asMathematical equationwhere the coefficients Mathematical symbol depend on the kind of tensor (see Table 1.11.6.1link to table) and Mathematical symbol are coefficients describing proper rotations.

Table 1.11.6.1 | top | pdf |
Coefficients Mathematical symbol corresponding to various kinds of tensor symmetry with respect to space inversion Mathematical symbol, rotations Mathematical symbol, and time reversal Mathematical symbol

Tensor type Example Transformation type
Mathematical symbol Mathematical symbol Mathematical symbol Mathematical symbol
Even Strain 1 1 1 1
Electric Electric field 1 −1 1 −1
Magnetic Magnetic field 1 1 −1 −1
Magnetoelectric Toroidal moment 1 −1 −1 1

Various parts of the resonant scattering factor (1.11.6.3)link to equation possess different kinds of symmetry with respect to: (1) space inversion Mathematical symbol or parity, (2) rotations Mathematical symbol and (3) time reversal Mathematical symbol. Both dipole–dipole and quadrupole–quadrupole terms are parity-even, whereas the dipole–quadrupole term is parity-odd. Thus, dipole–quadrupole events can exist only for atoms at positions without inversion symmetry.

It is convenient to separate the time-reversible and time-non-reversible terms in the contributions to the atomic tensor factor (1.11.6.3)link to equation. The dipole–dipole contribution to the resonant atomic factor can be represented as a sum of an isotropic, a symmetric and an antisymmetric part, written as (Blume, 1994link to reference)Mathematical equationwhere Mathematical symbol,Mathematical equationandMathematical equationMathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol; Mathematical symbol means the probability of the time-reversed state Mathematical symbol. If, for example, Mathematical symbol has a magnetic quantum number m, then Mathematical symbol has a magnetic quantum number Mathematical symbol.

In non-magnetic crystals, the probability of states with Mathematical symbol is the same, so that Mathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol; in this case Mathematical symbol is symmetric under permutation of the the indices.

Similarly, the dipole–quadrupole atomic factor can be represented as (Blume, 1994link to reference)Mathematical equationwhereMathematical equationwith Mathematical symbol. In (1.11.6.10)link to equation the first plus (Mathematical symbol) corresponds to the non-magnetic case (time reversal) and the minus (Mathematical symbol) corresponds to the time-non-reversal magnetic term, while the second Mathematical symbol corresponds to the symmetric and antisymmetric parts of the atomic factor. We see that Mathematical symbol can contribute only to scattering, while Mathematical symbol can contribute to both resonant scattering and resonant X-ray propagation. The latter term is a source of the so-called magnetochiral dichroism, first observed in Cr2O3 (Goulon et al., 2002link to reference, 2003link to reference), and it can be associated with a toroidal moment in a medium possessing magnetoelectric properties. The symmetry properties of magnetoelectic tensors are described well by Sirotin & Shaskolskaya (1982link to reference), Nye (1985link to reference) and Cracknell (1975link to reference). Which magnetoelectric properties can be studied using X-ray scattering are widely discussed by Marri & Carra (2004link to reference), Matsubara et al. (2005link to reference), Arima et al. (2005link to reference) and Lovesey et al. (2007link to reference).

It follows from (1.11.6.8)link to equation and (1.11.6.10)link to equation that Mathematical symbol and the dipole–quadrupole term can be represented as a sum of the symmetric Mathematical symbol and antisymmetric Mathematical symbol parts. From the physical point of view, it is useful to separate the dipole–quadrupole term into Mathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol, because only Mathematical symbol works in conventional optics where Mathematical symbol. The dipole–quadrupole terms are due to the hybridization of excited electronic states with different spacial parities, i.e. only for atomic sites without an inversion centre.

The pure quadrupole–quadrupole term in the tensor atomic factor is equal toMathematical equationwith the fourth-rank tensor Mathematical symbol given byMathematical equation

This fourth-rank tensor Mathematical symbol has the following symmetries:Mathematical equation

We can defineMathematical equationwith Mathematical symbol, whereMathematical equationWe see that Mathematical symbol vanishes in time-reversal invariant systems, which is true for non-magnetic structures.

1.11.6.2. Tensor atomic factors (non-magnetic case)

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In time-reversal invariant systems, equation (1.11.6.3)link to equation can be rewritten asMathematical equationwhere Mathematical symbol corresponds to the symmetric part of the dipole–dipole contribution, Mathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol mean the symmetric and antisymmetric parts of the third-rank tensor describing the dipole–quadrupole term, and Mathematical symbol denotes a symmetric quadrupole–quadrupole contribution. From the physical point of view, it is useful to separate the dipole–quadrupole term into Mathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol, because in conventional optics, where Mathematical symbol, only Mathematical symbol is relevant.

The tensors contributing to the atomic factor in (1.11.6.16)link to equation, Mathematical symbol, Mathematical symbol, Mathematical symbol, Mathematical symbol, are of different ranks and must obey the site symmetry of the atomic position. Generally, the tensors can be different, even for crystallographically equivalent positions, but all tensors of the same rank can be related to one of them, because all are connected through the symmetry operations of the crystal space group. In contrast, the scattering amplitude tensor Mathematical symbol does not necessarily comply with the point symmetry of the atomic position, because this symmetry is usually violated considering the arbitrary directions of the radiation wavevectors Mathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol.

Equation (1.11.6.16)link to equation is also frequently considered as a phenomenological expression of the tensor atomic factor where each tensor possesses internal symmetry (with respect to index permutations) and external symmetry (with respect to the atomic environment of the resonant atom). For instance, the tensor Mathematical symbol is symmetric, the rank-3 tensor has a symmetric and a antisymmetric part, and the rank-4 tensor is symmetric with respect to the permutation of each pair of indices. The external symmetry of Mathematical symbol coincides with the symmetry of the dielectric susceptibility tensor (Chapter 1.6[link] ). Correspondingly, the third-rank tensors Mathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol are similar to the gyration susceptibility and electro-optic tensors (Chapter 1.6[link] ), and Mathematical symbol has the same tensor form as that for elastic constants (Chapter 1.3[link] ). The symmetry restrictions on these tensors (determining the number of independent elements and relationships between tensor elements) are very important and widely used in practical work on resonant X-ray scattering. Since they can be found in Chapters 1.3[link] and 1.6[link] or in textbooks (Sirotin & Shaskolskaya, 1982link to reference; Nye, 1985link to reference), we do not discuss all possible symmetry cases in the following, but consider in the next section one specific example for X-ray scattering when the symmetries of the tensors given by expression (1.11.6.3)link to equation do not coincide with the most general external symmetry that is dictated by the atomic environment.

1.11.6.3. Hidden internal symmetry of the dipole–quadrupole tensors in resonant atomic factors

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It is fairly obvious from expressions (1.11.6.3)link to equation and (1.11.6.16)link to equation that in the non-magnetic case the symmetric and antisymmetric third-rank tensors, Mathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol, which describe the dipole–quadrupole contribution to the X-ray scattering factor, are not independent: the antisymmetric part, which is also responsible for optical-activity effects, can be expressed via the symmetric part (but not vice versa). Indeed, both of them can be described by a symmetric third-rank tensor Mathematical symbol resulting from the second-order Born approximation (1.11.6.3)link to equation,Mathematical equationwhereMathematical equationFrom equation (1.11.6.17)link to equation, one can infer that the symmetry restrictions for Mathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol are the same. Then it can be seen that Mathematical symbol can be expressed via Mathematical symbol.

For any symmetry, Mathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol have the same number of independent elements (with a maximum 18 for site symmetry 1). Thus, one can reverse equation (1.11.6.17)link to equation and express Mathematical symbol directly in terms of Mathematical symbol:Mathematical equation

Using equations (1.11.6.18)link to equation and (1.11.6.20)link to equation, one can express all nine elements of Mathematical symbol through Mathematical symbol:Mathematical equationaccording to which the antisymmetric part of the dipole–quadrupole term is a linear function of the symmetric one [however, not vice versa: equations (1.11.6.21)link to equation cannot be reversed].

Note that the equations (1.11.6.21)link to equation impose an additional restriction on Mathematical symbol, which applies to all atomic site symmetries:Mathematical equationThis is, in fact, a well known result: the pseudo-scalar part of Mathematical symbol vanishes in the dipole–quadrupole approximation used in equation (1.11.6.3)link to equation. Thus, for point symmetry 1, Mathematical symbol has only eight independent elements rather than nine. This additional restriction works in all cases of higher symmetries provided the pseudo-scalar part is allowed by the symmetry (i.e. point groups 2, 3, 4, 6, 222, 32, 422, 622, 23 and 432). All other symmetry restrictions on Mathematical symbol arise automatically from equation (1.11.6.21)link to equation taking into account the symmetry of Mathematical symbol [symmetry limitations on Mathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol for all crystallographic point groups can be found in Sirotin & Shaskolskaya (1982link to reference) and Nye (1985link to reference)].

Let us consider two examples, ZnO and anatase, TiO2, where the dipole–dipole contributions to forbidden reflections vanish, whereas both the symmetric and antisymmetric dipole-quadrupole terms are in principal allowed. In these crystals, the dipole–quadrupole terms have been measured by Goulon et al. (2007link to reference) and Kokubun et al. (2010link to reference).

In ZnO, crystallizing in the wurtzite structure, the 3m symmetry of the atomic positions imposes the following restrictions on Mathematical symbol:Mathematical equationwhere Mathematical symbol, Mathematical symbol, Mathematical symbol, Mathematical symbol are energy-dependent complex tensor elements [keeping the notations by Sirotin & Shaskolskaya (1982link to reference), the x axis is normal to the mirror plane, the y axis is normal to the glide plane and the z axis corresponds to the c axis of ZnO]. If we suppose these restrictions for Zn at Mathematical symbol, then for the other Zn at Mathematical symbol, which is related to the first site by the glide plane, there is the following set of elements: Mathematical symbol. Therefore, the structure factors of the glide-plane forbidden reflections are proportional to Mathematical symbol.

For the symmetric and antisymmetric parts one obtains from equations (1.11.6.17)link to equation and (1.11.6.18)link to equation the non-zero componentsMathematical equationandMathematical equation

Physically, we can expect that Mathematical symbol because Mathematical symbol survives even for tetrahedral symmetry Mathematical symbol, whereas Mathematical symbol is non-zero owing to a deviation from tetrahedral symmetry; in ZnO, the local coordinations of the Zn positions are only approximately tetrahedral.

In the anatase structure of TiO2, the Mathematical symbol symmetry of the atomic positions imposes restrictions on the tensors Mathematical symbol [keeping the notations of Sirotin & Shaskolskaia (1982link to reference): the x and y axes are normal to the mirror planes, and the z axis is parallel to the c axis]:Mathematical equationwhere Mathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol are energy-dependent complex parameters. If we apply these restrictions to the Ti atoms at Mathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol, then for the other two inversion-related Ti atoms at Mathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol (centre Mathematical symbol), the parameters are Mathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol.

For the symmetric and antisymmetric parts one obtains as non-vanishing componentsMathematical equationandMathematical equation

It is important to note that the symmetric part Mathematical symbol of the atomic factor can be affected by a contribution from thermal-motion-induced dipole–dipole terms. The latter terms are tensors of rank 3 proportional to the spatial derivatives Mathematical symbol, which take the same tensor form as Mathematical symbol but are not related to Mathematical symbol by equations (1.11.6.21)link to equation. In ZnO, which was studied in detail by Collins et al. (2003link to reference), the thermal-motion-induced contribution is rather significant, while for anatase the situation is less clear.

1.11.6.4. Tensor structure factors

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Once the tensor atomic factors have been determined [either from phenomenological expressions like (1.11.6.16)link to equation, according to the site-symmetry restrictions, or from given microscopic expressions, e.g. (1.11.4.3)link to equation], tensor structure factors are obtained by summation over the contributions of all atoms in the unit cell, as in conventional diffraction theory:Mathematical equationwhere the index t enumerates the crystallographically different types of scatterers (atoms belonging to the same or different chemical elements), the index u denotes the crystallographically equivalent positions; Mathematical symbol is a site-occupancy factor, and Mathematical symbol is the Debye–Waller temperature factor. The tensors of the atomic factors, Mathematical symbol, Mathematical symbol, Mathematical symbol, Mathematical symbol, are, in general, different for crystallographically equivalent positions, that is for different u, and it is exactly this difference that enables the excitation of the resonant forbidden reflections.

Extinction rules and polarization properties for forbidden reflections are different for tensor structure factors of different ranks, a circumstance that may be used for experimental separation of different tensor contributions (for tensors of rank 2, information is given in Tables 1.11.2.1link to table and 1.11.2.2link to table). In the harmonic approximation, anisotropies of the atomic thermal displacements (Debye–Waller factor) are also described by tensors of rank 2 or higher, but, owing to these, excitations of glide-plane and screw-axis forbidden reflections are not possible.

1.11.6.5. Tensor atomic factors (magnetic case)

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Magnetic crystals possess different densities of states with opposite spin directions. During a multipole transition from the ground state to an excited state (or the reverse), the projection of an electron spin does not change, but the projection of the orbital moment varies. The consideration of all possible transitions allows for the formulation of the sum rules (Carra et al., 1993link to reference; Strange, 1994link to reference) that are widely used in X-ray magnetic circular dichroism (XMCD). When measuring the differences of the absorption coefficients at the Mathematical symbol absorption edges of transition elements or at the M edges of rare-earth elements (Erskine & Stern, 1975link to reference; Schütz et al., 1987link to reference; Chen et al., 1990link to reference), these rules allow separation of the spin and orbital contributions to the XMCD signal, and hence the study of the spin and orbital moments characterizing the ground state. In magnetic crystals, the tensors change their sign with time reversal because Mathematical symbol if Mathematical symbol and/or Mathematical symbol (Zeeman splitting in a magnetic field). That the antisymmetric parts of the tensors differ from zero follows from equations (1.11.6.7)link to equation, (1.11.6.10)link to equation and (1.11.6.15)link to equation.

Time reversal also changes the incident and scattered vectors corresponding to permutation of the Cartesian tensor indices. For dipole–dipole resonant events, the symmetric part Mathematical symbol does not vary with exchange of indices, hence it is time- and parity-even. The antisymmetric part Mathematical symbol changes its sign upon permutation of the indices, so it is parity-even and time-odd, being associated with a magnetic moment (1.11.6.41)link to equation. This part of the tensor is responsible for the existence of X-ray magnetic circular dichroism (XMCD) and the appearance of the magnetic satellites in various kinds of magnetic structures.

If the rotation symmetry of a second-rank tensor is completely described by rotation about the magnetic moment m, then the antisymmetric second-rank tensor Mathematical symbol can be represented as Mathematical symbol, where Mathematical symbol is an antisymmetric third-rank unit tensor and Mathematical symbol are the coordinates of the magnetic moment of the resonant atom. So, the scattering amplitude for the dipole–dipole Mathematical symbol transition can be given asMathematical equationMathematical symbol, Mathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol are energy-dependent coefficients referring to the sth atom in the unit cell and Mathematical symbol is a unit vector along the magnetic moment. The third term in (1.11.6.41)link to equation is time non-reversal, and it is responsible for the magnetic linear dichroism (XMLD). This kind of X-ray dichroism is also influenced by the crystal field (Thole et al., 1986link to reference; van der Laan et al., 1986link to reference).

The coefficients Mathematical symbol, Mathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol involved in (1.11.6.41)link to equation may be represented in terms of spherical harmonics. Using the relations (Berestetskii et al., 1982link to reference; Hannon et al., 1988link to reference)Mathematical equationandMathematical equationfor Mathematical symbol, Mathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol, Mathematical symbol, respectively, one obtainsMathematical equationwithMathematical equationwhere Mathematical symbol is the probability of the initial state Mathematical symbol, Mathematical symbol is that for the transition from state Mathematical symbol to a final state Mathematical symbol, and Mathematical symbol is the ratio of the partial line width of the excited state due to a pure Mathematical symbol Mathematical symbol radiative decay and the width due to all processes, both radiative and non-radiative (for example, the Auger decay).

Magnetic ordering is frequently accompanied by a local anisotropy in the crystal. In this case, both kinds of local anisotropies exist simultaneously and must be taken into account in, for example, XMLD (van der Laan et al., 1986link to reference) and XMχD (Goulon et al., 2002link to reference). In resonant X-ray scattering experiments, simultaneous existence of forbidden reflections provided by spin and orbital ordering (Murakami et al., 1998link to reference) as well as magnetic and crystal anisotropy (Ji et al., 2003link to reference; Paolasini et al., 2002link to reference, 1999link to reference) have been observed. The explicit Cartesian form of the tensor atomic factor in the presence of both a magnetic moment and crystal anisotropy has been proposed by Blume (1994link to reference). When the symmetry of the atomic site is high enough, i.e. the atom lies on an n-order axis (Mathematical symbol), then the tensors Mathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol can be represented asMathematical equationandMathematical equationwhere Mathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol depend on the energy, and Mathematical symbol is a unit vector along the symmetry axis under consideration. One can see that the atomic tensor factor is given by a sum of three terms: the first is due to the symmetry of the local crystal anisotropy, the second describes pure magnetic scattering, and the last (`combined') term is induced by interference between magnetic and non-magnetic resonant scattering. This issue was first discussed by Blume (1994link to reference) and later in more detail by Ovchinnikova & Dmitrienko (1997link to reference, 2000link to reference). All the terms can give rise to forbidden reflections, i.e. sets of pure resonant forbidden magnetic and non-magnetic reflections can be observed for the same crystal, see Ji et al. (2003link to reference) and Paolasini et al. (2002link to reference, 1999link to reference). Only reflections caused by the `combined' term (Ovchinnikova & Dmitrienko, 1997link to reference) have not been observed yet.

Neglecting the crystal field, an explicit form of the fourth-rank tensors describing the quadrupole–quadrupole Mathematical symbol events in magnetic structures was proposed by Hannon et al. (1988link to reference) and Blume (1994link to reference):Mathematical equationMathematical equation

Then, being convoluted with polarization vectors, the scattering amplitude of the quadrupole transition (Mathematical symbol) can be written as a sum of 13 terms belonging to five orders of magnetic moments (Hannon et al., 1988link to reference; Blume, 1994link to reference). The final expression that gives the quadrupole contribution to the magnetic scattering amplitude in terms of individual spin components is rather complicated and can be found, for example, in Hill & McMorrow (1996link to reference). In the presence of both a magnetic moment and local crystal anisotropy, the fourth-rank tensor describing Mathematical symbol events depends on both kinds of anisotropy and can include the `combined' part in explicit form, as found by Ovchinnikova & Dmitrienko (2000link to reference).

1.11.6.6. Tensor atomic factors (spherical tensor representation)

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Another representation of the scattering amplitude is widely used in the scientific literature (Hannon et al., 1988link to reference; Luo et al., 1993link to reference; Carra et al., 1993link to reference; Lovesey & Collins, 1996link to reference) for the description of resonant multipole transitions. In order to obtain the scattering amplitude and intensity for a resonant process described by some set of spherical tensor components, the tensor that describes the atomic scattering must be contracted by a tensor of the same rank and inversion/time-reversal symmetry which describes the X-ray probe, so that the result would be a scalar. There are well known relations between the components of the atomic factor tensor, both in Cartesian and spherical representations. For the dipole–dipole transition, the resonant scattering amplitude can be written as (Hannon et al., 1988link to reference; Collins et al., 2007link to reference; Paolasini, 2012link to reference; Joly et al., 2012link to reference)Mathematical equationwhere Mathematical symbol are the Cartesian tensor components, Mathematical symbol depends only on the incident and scattered radiation and the polarization vectors, and Mathematical symbol is associated with the tensor properties of the absorbing atom and can be represented in terms of a multipole expansion.

It is convenient to decompose each tensor into its irreducible parts. For example, an Mathematical symbol tensor containing nine Cartesian components can be represented as a sum of three irreducible tensors with ranks Mathematical symbol (one component), Mathematical symbol (three components) and Mathematical symbol (five components). This decomposition is unique.

For Mathematical symbol:Mathematical equation

For Mathematical symbol:Mathematical equation

For Mathematical symbol:Mathematical equationMathematical equation

It follows from (1.11.6.14)link to equation that the fourth-rank tensor describing the quadrupole–quadrupole X-ray scattering can also be divided into two parts: the time-reversal part, Mathematical symbol, and the non-time-reversal part, Mathematical symbol. Both can be explicitly represented by (1.11.6.3)link to equation and (1.11.6.2)link to equation, in which all these tensors are parity-even. The explicit form of the fourth-rank tensors is suitable for the analysis of possible effects in resonant X-ray absorption and scattering. Nevertheless, sometimes the following representation of the scattering amplitude as a product of spherical tensors is preferable:Mathematical equation

Here, the dipole–quadrupole tensor atomic factor given by (1.11.6.10)link to equation is represented by a sum over several tensors with different symmetries. All tensors are parity-odd, but the tensors Mathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol are also non-time-reversal. The scattering amplitude corresponding to the dipole–quadrupole resonant X-ray scattering can be represented asMathematical equationThe explicit form of Mathematical symbol can be found in Marri & Carra (2004link to reference). Various parts of Mathematical symbol possess different symmetry with respect to the reversal of space Mathematical symbol and time Mathematical symbol.

The spherical representation of the tensor atomic factor allows one to analyse its various components, as they possess different symmetries with respect to rotations or space and time inversion. For each Mathematical symbol, Mathematical symbol is related to a specific term of the multipole expansion of the system. Multipole expansions of electric and magnetic fields generated by charges and permanent currents are widely used in characterizing the electromagnetic state of a physical system (Berestetskii et al., 1982link to reference). The transformation rules for electric and magnetic multipoles of both parities under space inversion and time reversal are of great importance for electromagnetic effects in crystals. The correspondence between the Mathematical symbol and electromagnetic multipoles is shown in Table 1.11.6.2link to table. In this table, the properties of the tensors Mathematical symbol under time reversal and space inversion on one side are identified with multipole terms describing the physical system on the other. In fact, for any given tensor of rank Mathematical symbol there is one electromagnetic multipole of the same rank (Mathematical symbol dipole, Mathematical symbol quadrupole, Mathematical symbol octupole, Mathematical symbol hexadecapole) and with the same Mathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol properties. Note that Mathematical symbol-odd Mathematical symbol tensors have both Mathematical symbol-odd (−) and Mathematical symbol-even (+) terms for any Mathematical symbol, whereas Mathematical symbol-even tensors (both Mathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol) are Mathematical symbol-odd for odd rank and Mathematical symbol-even for even rank, respectively (Di Matteo et al., 2005link to reference).

Table 1.11.6.2 | top | pdf |
Identification of properties under time inversion Mathematical symbol and space inversion Mathematical symbol of tensors associated with multipole expansion

After Di Matteo et al. (2005link to reference) and Paolasini (2012link to reference).

Rank of tensor Resonant process T P Type Multipole
0 E 1E1 + + charge monopole
0 E 2E2 + + charge monopole
1 E 1E1 + magnetic dipole
1 E 2E2 + magnetic dipole
1 E 1E2 + electric dipole
1 E 1E2 polar toroidal dipole
2 E 1E1 + + electric quadrupole
2 E 2E2 + + electric quadrupole
2 E 1E2 + axial toroidal quadrupole
2 E 1E2 magnetic quadrupole
3 E 2E2 + magnetic octupole
3 E 1E2 + electric octupole
3 E 1E2 polar toroidal octupole
4 E 2E2 + + electric hexadecapole

An important contribution of Luo et al. (1993link to reference) and Carra et al. (1993link to reference) consisted of expressing the amplitude coefficients in terms of experimentally significant quantities, electron spin and orbital moments. This procedure is valid within the fast-collision approximation, when either the deviation from resonance, Mathematical symbol, or the width, Mathematical symbol, is large compared to the splitting of the excited-state configuration. The approximation is expected to hold for the Mathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol edges of the rare earths and actinides, as well as for the Mathematical symbol and Mathematical symbol edges of the actinides. In this energy regime, the resonant factors can be summed independently, leaving amplitude coefficients that may be written in terms of multipole moment operators, which are themselves single-particle operators summed over the valence electrons in the initial state.

Magnetic scattering has become a powerful method for understanding magnetic structures (Tonnere, 1996link to reference; Paolasini, 2012link to reference), particularly as it is suitable even for powder samples (Collins et al., 1995link to reference). Since the first studies (Gibbs et al., 1988link to reference), resonant magnetic X-ray scattering has been observed at various edges of transition metals and rare earths. The studies include magnetics and multiferroics with commensurate and incommensurate modulation (Walker et al., 2009link to reference; Kim et al., 2011link to reference; Ishii et al., 2006link to reference; Partzsch et al., 2012link to reference; Lander, 2012link to reference; Beale et al., 2012link to reference; Lovesey et al., 2012link to reference; Mazzoli et al., 2007link to reference) as well as multi-k magnetic structures (Bernhoeft et al., 2012link to reference), and structures with orbital ordering (Murakami et al., 1998link to reference) and higher-order multipoles (Princep et al., 2011link to reference). It has also been shown that effects can be measured not only at the edges of magnetic atoms [K edges of transition metals, L edges of rare-earth elements and M edges of actinides (Vettier, 2001link to reference, 2012link to reference)], but also at the edges of non-magnetic atoms (Mannix et al., 2001link to reference; van Veenendaal, 2003link to reference).

Thus, magnetic and non-magnetic resonant X-ray diffraction clearly has the potential to be an important working tool in modern materials research. The advantage of polarized X-rays is their sensitivity to both the local atomic environments of resonant atoms and their partial structures. The knowledge of the local and global crystal symmetries and of the interplay of their effects is therefore of great value for a better understanding of structural, electronic and magnetic features of crystalline condensed matter.

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