Emmanuel Rashba

Emmanuel Rashba
Ukrainian: Еммануїл Йосипович Рашба
Russian: Эммануил Иосифович Рашба
Born (1927-10-30) October 30, 1927 (age 96)
NationalityAmerican
CitizenshipUS
Alma materTaras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, Physical Department
Known forRashba effect
EDSR
Giant oscillator strength
Non-Euclidean surface growth
Scientific career
FieldsCondensed matter physics, spintronics, nanoscience
InstitutionsInstitute of Physics (Kyiv), Institute of Semiconductors (Kyiv), Landau Institute for Theoretical Physics (Moscow), University of Utah (Salt Lake City), University at Buffalo, SUNY Harvard University (Cambridge, Massachusetts)

Emmanuel I. Rashba (born October 30, 1927, Kyiv) is a Soviet-American theoretical physicist of Jewish origin who worked in Ukraine, Russia and in the United States. Rashba is known for his contributions to different areas of condensed matter physics and spintronics, especially the Rashba effect in spin physics, and also for the prediction of electric dipole spin resonance (EDSR),[1] that was widely investigated[2] and became a regular tool for operating electron spins in nanostructures, phase transitions in spin-orbit coupled systems driven by change of the Fermi surface topology,[3] Giant oscillator strength of impurity excitons,[4] and coexistence of free and self-trapped excitons.[5] The principal subject of spintronics is all-electric operation of electron spins, and EDSR was the first phenomenon predicted and experimentally observed in this field.

  1. ^ E. I. Rashba, Properties of semiconductors with a loop of extrema, I. Cyclotron and combined resonances in a perpendicular field, Sov. Phys. Solid State 2, 1109 (1960).
  2. ^ Rashba, E. I.; Sheka, V. I. (2018). "Electric-Dipole Spin Resonances". arXiv:1812.01721 [cond-mat.mes-hall].
  3. ^ I. I. Boiko and E. I. Rashba, Sov. Phys. Solid State 2, 1692 (1960),
  4. ^ E. I. Rashba, Giant Oscillator Strengths Associated with Exciton Complexes, Sov. Phys. Semicond. 8, 807-816 (1975)
  5. ^ E. I. Rashba, Self-Trapping of Excitons, in: Excitons, (North-Holland, Amsterdam) 1982, p. 543-602.

Developed by StudentB