Emerging magnetic nutation
Pascal Thibaudeau, Stam Nicolis

TL;DR
This paper presents a theoretical framework where magnetic nutation emerges from a systematic expansion of a kernel describing a magnetic moment's interaction with colored noise, linking it to the fluctuation-dissipation theorem and supported by numerical simulations.
Contribution
It introduces a novel expansion approach to derive magnetic nutation and Gilbert damping from colored noise interactions, extending understanding beyond white noise assumptions.
Findings
Nutation arises from a systematic expansion of the interaction kernel.
Colored noise leads to deviations from the simple fluctuation-dissipation relation.
Numerical simulations show longer equilibration times and non-uniform approach to equilibrium.
Abstract
Nutation has been recognized as of great significance for spintronics; but justifying its presence has proven to be a hard problem. In this paper we show that nutation can be understood as emerging from a systematic expansion of a kernel that describes the history of the interaction of a magnetic moment with a bath of colored noise. The parameter of the expansion is the ratio of the colored noise timescale to the precession period. In the process we obtain the Gilbert damping from the same expansion. We recover the known results, when the coefficients of the two terms are proportional to one another, in the white noise limit; and show how colored noise leads to situations where this simple relation breaks down, but what replaces it can be understood by the appropriate generalization of the fluctuation--dissipation theorem. Numerical simulations of the stochastic equations support the…
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