X-ray imaging of spin currents and magnetisation dynamics at the nanoscale
Stefano Bonetti

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent advances in X-ray microscopy techniques, especially scanning X-ray transmission microscopy, enabling direct nanoscale imaging of spin currents and magnetisation dynamics, which enhances understanding of spin physics.
Contribution
It provides an overview of how X-ray microscopy, particularly at synchrotron sources, allows direct observation of spin motion and magnetisation dynamics at the nanoscale, advancing experimental capabilities.
Findings
Direct imaging of spin accumulation and currents
Visualization of magnetisation dynamics in thin ferromagnetic films
Potential for deeper understanding of spin physics phenomena
Abstract
Understanding how spins move in time and space is the aim of both fundamental and applied research in modern magnetism. Over the past three decades, research in this field has led to technological advances that have had a major impact on our society, while improving the understanding of the fundamentals of spin physics. However, important questions still remain unanswered, because it is experimentally challenging to directly observe spins and their motion with a combined high spatial and temporal resolution. In this article, we present an overview of the recent advances in X-ray microscopy that allow researchers to directly watch spins move in time and space at the microscopically relevant scales. We discuss scanning X-ray transmission microscopy (STXM) at resonant soft X-ray edges, which is available at most modern synchrotron light sources. This technique measures magnetic contrast…
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