Measurements of magnetic noise emanating from ferromagnets due to domain
motion were first carried out nearly 100 years ago and have underpinned much
science and technology. Antiferromagnets, which carry no net external magnetic
dipole moment, yet have a periodic arrangement of the electron spins extending
over macroscopic distances, should also display magnetic noise, but this must
be sampled at spatial wavelengths of order several interatomic spacings, rather
than the macroscopic scales characteristic of ferromagnets. Here we present the
first direct measurement of the fluctuations in the nanometre-scale spin-
(charge-) density wave superstructure associated with antiferromagnetism in
elemental Chromium. The technique used is X-ray Photon Correlation
Spectroscopy, where coherent x-ray diffraction produces a speckle pattern that
serves as a "fingerprint" of a particular magnetic domain configuration. The
temporal evolution of the patterns corresponds to domain walls advancing and
retreating over micron distances. While the domain wall motion is thermally
activated at temperatures above 100K, it is not so at lower temperatures, and
indeed has a rate which saturates at a finite value - consistent with quantum
fluctuations - on cooling below 40K. Our work is important because it provides
an important new measurement tool for antiferromagnetic domain engineering as
well as revealing a fundamental new fact about spin dynamics in the simplest
antiferromagnet.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figure