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Recent studies in three dimensional spintronics propose that the OE rsted field plays a significant role in cylindrical nanowires. However, there is no direct report of its impact on magnetic textures. Here, we use time-resolved scanning transmission X-ray microscopy to image the dynamic response of magnetization in cylindrical Co$_{30}$Ni$_{70}$ nanowires subjected to nanosecond OE rsted field pulses. We observe the tilting of longitudinally magnetized domains towards the azimuthal OE rsted field direction and create a robust model to reproduce the differential magnetic contrasts and extract the angle of tilt. Further, we report the compression and expansion, or breathing, of a Bloch-point domain wall that occurs when weak pulses with opposite sign are applied. We expect that this work lays the foundation for and provides an incentive to further studying complex and fascinating magnetization dynamics in nanowires, especially the predicted ultra-fast domain wall motion and associated spin wave emissions.
A wire that conducts an electric current will give rise to circular magnetic field (the {O}rsted magnetic field) that is easily calculated using the Maxwell-Ampere equation. For wires with diameters in the macroscopic scale, this is an established ph
The reversal of the magnetization under the influence of a field pulse has been previously predicted to be an incoherent process with several competing phenomena such as domain wall relaxation, spin wave-mediated instability regions, and vortex-core
The nature of magnetization reversal in an isolated cylindrical nanomagnet has been studied employing time-resolved magnetoresistance measurement. We find that the reversal mode is highly stochastic, occurring either by multimode or single-step switc
We report several procedures for the robust nucleation of magnetic domain walls in cylindrical permalloy nanowires. Specific features of the magnetic force microscopy contrast of such soft wires are discussed, with a view to avoid the misinterpretati
Recently magnetic storage and magnetic memory have shifted towards the use of magnetic thin films with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy (PMA). Understanding the magnetic damping in these materials is crucial, but normal Ferromagnetic Resonance (FMR)