Ultrafast EUV imaging reveals magnetic domain walls in ferro- and ferrimagnetic films remain invariant in position, shape, and width during up to 50% demagnetization.
Revealing domain wall stability during ultrafast demagnetization
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abstract
The ultrafast control of nanoscale spin textures such as magnetic domain walls or skyrmions is essential for advancing high-speed, high-density spintronics. However, imaging their dynamics will require a technique that combines nanometer spatial and femtosecond temporal resolution. Introducing ultrafast sub-wavelength imaging in the extreme ultraviolet, we track domain wall properties during ultrafast demagnetization in ferro- and ferrimagnetic thin films. We reveal that domain walls remain invariant in position, shape, and width, down to a demonstrated sub-nanometer precision, for up to 50% demagnetization. Stronger excitation causes stochastic nanoscale domain switching. This previously unobservable robustness of laser-excited domain walls highlights the localized nature of photoinduced demagnetization and presents both challenges and opportunities for all-optical magnetic control. The presented technique can be generalized to directly probe nanoscale dynamics in spintronic materials and devices.
fields
cond-mat.mtrl-sci 1years
2025 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
citing papers explorer
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Revealing domain wall stability during ultrafast demagnetization
Ultrafast EUV imaging reveals magnetic domain walls in ferro- and ferrimagnetic films remain invariant in position, shape, and width during up to 50% demagnetization.