| Literature DB >> 33020615 |
Felix Büttner1,2, Bastian Pfau3, Marie Böttcher4, Michael Schneider5, Giuseppe Mercurio6, Christian M Günther7,8, Piet Hessing5, Christopher Klose5, Angela Wittmann9, Kathinka Gerlinger5, Lisa-Marie Kern5, Christian Strüber5, Clemens von Korff Schmising5, Josefin Fuchs5, Dieter Engel5, Alexandra Churikova9, Siying Huang9, Daniel Suzuki9, Ivan Lemesh9, Mantao Huang9, Lucas Caretta9, David Weder5, John H Gaida10, Marcel Möller10, Tyler R Harvey10, Sergey Zayko10, Kai Bagschik11, Robert Carley6, Laurent Mercadier6, Justine Schlappa6, Alexander Yaroslavtsev6, Loïc Le Guyarder6, Natalia Gerasimova6, Andreas Scherz6, Carsten Deiter6, Rafael Gort6, David Hickin6, Jun Zhu6, Monica Turcato6, David Lomidze6, Florian Erdinger12, Andrea Castoldi13,14, Stefano Maffessanti11, Matteo Porro6, Andrey Samartsev6, Jairo Sinova4, Claus Ropers10, Johan H Mentink15, Bertrand Dupé4,16, Geoffrey S D Beach9, Stefan Eisebitt5,8.
Abstract
Topological states of matter exhibit fascinating physics combined with an intrinsic stability. A key challenge is the fast creation of topological phases, which requires massive reorientation of charge or spin degrees of freedom. Here we report the picosecond emergence of an extended topological phase that comprises many magnetic skyrmions. The nucleation of this phase, followed in real time via single-shot soft X-ray scattering after infrared laser excitation, is mediated by a transient topological fluctuation state. This state is enabled by the presence of a time-reversal symmetry-breaking perpendicular magnetic field and exists for less than 300 ps. Atomistic simulations indicate that the fluctuation state largely reduces the topological energy barrier and thereby enables the observed rapid and homogeneous nucleation of the skyrmion phase. These observations provide fundamental insights into the nature of topological phase transitions, and suggest a path towards ultrafast topological switching in a wide variety of materials through intermediate fluctuating states.Year: 2020 PMID: 33020615 DOI: 10.1038/s41563-020-00807-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Mater ISSN: 1476-1122 Impact factor: 43.841