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Magnetic skyrmion, i.e. a topologically stable swirling spin texture, appears as a particle-like object in the two-dimensional (2D) systems, and has recently attracted attention as a candidate of novel information carrier. In the real three-dimensional (3D) systems, a skyrmion is expected to form a string structure along an extra dimension, while its experimental identification has rarely been achieved. Here, we report the direct visualization of 3D shape of individual skyrmion strings, for the recently discovered room-temperature skyrmion-hosting noncentrosymmetric compound Mn1.4Pt0.9Pd0.1Sn. For this purpose, we have newly developed the magnetic X-ray tomography measurement system that can apply magnetic field, which plays a key role on the present achievement. Through the tomographic reconstruction of the 3D magnetization distribution based on the transmission images taken from various angles, a genuine skyrmion string running through the entire thickness of the sample, as well as various defect structures such as the interrupted and Y-shaped strings, are successfully identified. The observed point defect may represent the emergent magnetic monopole, as recently proposed theoretically. The present tomographic approach with tunable magnetic field paves the way for the direct visualization of the structural dynamics of individual skyrmion strings in the 3D space, which will contribute to the better understanding of the creation, annihilation and transfer process of these topological objects toward the potential device applications.
Skyrmions represent topologically stable field configurations with particle-like properties. We used neutron scattering to observe the spontaneous formation of a two-dimensional lattice of skyrmion lines, a type of magnetic vortices, in the chiral it
Conventional crystalline magnets are characterized by symmetry breaking and normal modes of excitation called magnons with quantized angular momentum $hbar$. Neutron scattering correspondingly features extra magnetic Bragg diffraction at low temperat
We identify a large family of ground states of a topological Skyrmion magnet whose classical degeneracy persists to all orders in a semiclassical expansion. This goes along with an exceptional robustness of the concomitant ground state configurations
We have investigated anomalous Hall effect and magnetoresistance in a noncentrosymmetric itinerant magnet Cr$_{11}$Ge$_{19}$. While the temperature- and magnetic-field-dependent anomalous Hall conductivity is just proportional to the magnetization ab
We study the evolution of the magnetic phase diagram of Mn$_{1-x}$Fe$_{x}$Ge alloys with concentration $x$ ($0 leq x leq 0.3$) by small-angle neutron scattering. We unambiguously observe the absence of a skyrmion lattice (or A-phase) in bulk MnGe and