- Higley, Daniel J;
- Reid, Alex H;
- Chen, Zhao;
- Guyader, Loïc Le;
- Hellwig, Olav;
- Lutman, Alberto A;
- Liu, Tianmin;
- Shafer, Padraic;
- Chase, Tyler;
- Dakovski, Georgi L;
- Mitra, Ankush;
- Yuan, Edwin;
- Schlappa, Justine;
- Dürr, Hermann A;
- Schlotter, William F;
- Stöhr, Joachim
Resonant X-ray absorption, where an X-ray photon excites a core electron into an unoccupied valence state, is an essential process in many standard X-ray spectroscopies. With increasing X-ray intensity, the X-ray absorption strength is expected to become nonlinear. Here, we report the onset of such a nonlinearity in the resonant X-ray absorption of magnetic Co/Pd multilayers near the Co L[Formula: see text] edge. The nonlinearity is directly observed through the change of the absorption spectrum, which is modified in less than 40 fs within 2 eV of its threshold. This is interpreted as a redistribution of valence electrons near the Fermi level. For our magnetic sample this also involves mixing of majority and minority spins, due to sample demagnetization. Our findings reveal that nonlinear X-ray responses of materials may already occur at relatively low intensities, where the macroscopic sample is not destroyed, providing insight into ultrafast charge and spin dynamics.