Magnetic skyrmions have so far been treated as two-dimensional spin
structures characterized by a topological winding number describing the
rotation of spins across the skyrmion. However, in real systems with a finite
thickness of the material being larger than the magnetic exchange length, the
skyrmion spin texture extends into the third dimension and cannot be assumed as
homogeneous. Using soft x-ray laminography we reconstruct with about 20nm
spatial (voxel) resolution the full three-dimensional spin texture of a
skyrmion in an 800 nm diameter and 95 nm thin disk patterned into a trilayer
[Ir/Co/Pt] thin film structure. A quantitative analysis finds that the
evolution of the radial profile of the topological skyrmion number and the
chirality is non-uniform across the thickness of the disk. Estimates of local
micromagnetic energy densities suggest that the changes in topological profile
are related to non-uniform competing energetic interactions. Theoretical
calculations and micromagnetic simulations are consistent with the experimental
findings. Our results provide the foundation for nanoscale magnetic metrology
for future tailored spintronics devices using topology as a design parameter,
and have the potential to reverse-engineer a spin Hamiltonian from macroscopic
data, tying theory more closely to experiment.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figure