Abstract
Magnetoeleastic pulses with variable echo time were observed in a rod of yttrium iron garnet. Data were taken at room temperature in the frequency interval 0.5 to 3.3 Gc/sec with input power in the milliwatt range. At a fixed carrier frequency, pulses were observed for external magnetic fields ranging over several hundred oersted; characteristically the echo time increased with decreasing field. The carrier frequency‐magnetic field‐echo time behavior can be explained in terms of a θ=0 magnetoelastic disturbance traveling along the rod axis. It is launched at the position where ωcHi. The disturbance propagates along the rod axis to the nearer end‐face where it is reflected. On arrival back at the launch site, a fraction of the energy is detected and the remainder reflected for another round trip. The process is repeated several times to give rise to a pulse sequence. The experimental results can be understood in terms of a magnetoelastic wave packet with calculated travel time T=∫um−1dz≈∫us−1dz+∫ue−1dz , where the group velocities, u, refer to magnetoelastic, spin, and elastic waves, respectively. Spin‐wave loss has been included and gives improved agreement between theory and experiment.