Resonant dynamics of skyrmion lattices in thin film multilayers: Localised modes and spin wave emission
Abstract
The spectral signatures of magnetic skyrmions under microwave field excitation are of fundamental interest and can be an asset for high frequency applications. These topological solitons can be tailored in multilayered thin films, but the experimental observation of their spin wave dynamics remains elusive, in particular due to large damping. Here, we study Pt/FeCoB/AlOx multilayers hosting dense and robust skyrmion lattices at room temperature with Gilbert damping of 0.02. We use magnetic force microscopy to characterise their static magnetic phases and broadband ferromagnetic resonance to probe their high frequency response. Micromagnetic simulations reproduce the experiments with accuracy and allow us to identify distinct resonant modes detected in the skyrmion lattice phase. Low (< 2 GHz) and intermediate frequency (2-8 GHz) modes involve excitations localised to skyrmion edges in conjunction with precession of the uniform background magnetisation, while a high frequency (> 12 GHz) mode corresponds to in-phase skyrmion core precession emitting spin waves into uniform background with wavelengths in the 50--80 nm range commensurate with the lattice structure. These findings could be instrumental in the investigation of room temperature wave scattering and the implementation of novel microwave processing schemes in reconfigurable arrays of solitons.
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