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Few-nm tracking of current-driven magnetic vortex orbits using ultrafast Lorentz microscopy

Marcel Möller, John H. Gaida, Sascha Schäfer, Claus Ropers

2020Communications Physics79 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Transmission electron microscopy is one of the most powerful techniques to characterize nanoscale magnetic structures. In light of the importance of fast control schemes of magnetic states, time-resolved microscopy techniques are highly sought after in fundamental and applied research. Here, we implement time-resolved Lorentz imaging in combination with synchronous radio-frequency excitation using an ultrafast transmission electron microscope. As a model system, we examine the current-driven gyration of a vortex core in a 2 μm-sized magnetic nanoisland. We record the trajectory of the vortex core for continuous-wave excitation, achieving a localization precision of ±2 nm with few-minute integration times. Furthermore, by tracking the core position after rapidly switching off the current, we find a transient increase of the free oscillation frequency and the orbital decay rate, both attributed to local disorder in the vortex potential.

Topics & Concepts

VortexExcitationGyrationPhysicsUltrashort pulseTransmission electron microscopyMicroscopyOscillation (cell signaling)Condensed matter physicsTracking (education)OpticsComputational physicsMaterials scienceMolecular physicsChemistryMechanicsQuantum mechanicsLaserGeometryBiochemistryMathematicsPsychologyPedagogyMagnetic properties of thin filmsQuantum and electron transport phenomenaCharacterization and Applications of Magnetic Nanoparticles
Few-nm tracking of current-driven magnetic vortex orbits using ultrafast Lorentz microscopy | Litcius