Ferromagnetic domain wall as a nonreciprocal string
Seminar
- Date: Mar 22, 2019
- Time: 11:00 AM (Local Time Germany)
- Speaker: Shu Zhang
- Johns Hopkins University
- Location: Max-Planck-Institut für Mikrostrukturphysik, Weinberg 2, 06120 Halle (Saale)
- Room: Lecture Hall, B.1.11
The
collective coordinate method has been a great success in analyzing the
dynamics of point-like topological
defects, such as vortices in two dimensions and a domain wall in one
dimension. To study a domain wall in a two-dimensional ferromagnetic
film, we generalize the discrete collective coordinates into a
continuous field describing the displacement of the wall. The
domain wall moves like a string. However, because
of the precessional nature of the spins, its dynamics is
nonreciprocal: the waves traveling left and right have different
speeds, differing
from the familiar case of an elastic string. Given an initial
deformation, the nonreciprocal string with free ends exhibits a
uniform transverse motion in
addition to oscillations,
which is allowed by the broken time-reversal symmetry. We provide an
intuitive explanation of this phenomena by deriving the conserved
momentum
with a geometric contribution. This framework also leads to a good
understanding of how a domain wall evolves in the presence of external
perturbations and dissipation.