2 research outputs found
Observation of Bloch-point domain walls in cylindrical magnetic nanowires
Topological protection is an elegant way of warranting the integrity of
quantum and nanosized systems. In magnetism one example is the Bloch-point, a
peculiar object implying the local vanishing of magnetization within a
ferromagnet. Its existence had been postulated and described theoretically
since several decades, however it has never been observed. We con rm
experimentally the existence of Bloch points, imaged within domain walls in
cylindrical magnetic nanowires, combining surface and transmission XMCD-PEEM
magnetic microscopy. This opens the way to the experimental search for peculiar
phenomena predicted during the motion of Bloch-point-based domain walls
Broadband Setup for Magnetic-Field-Induced Domain Wall Motion in Cylindrical Nanowires
In order to improve the precision of domain wall dynamics measurements, we
develop a coplanar waveguide-based setup where the domain wall motion should be
triggered by pulses of magnetic field. The latter are produced by the Oersted
field of the waveguide as a current pulse travels toward its termination, where
it is dissipated. Our objective is to eliminate a source of bias in domain wall
speed estimation while optimizing the field amplitude. Here, we present
implementations of this concept for magnetic force microscopy (MFM) and
synchrotron-based investigation