- Jangid, Rahul;
- Hagström, Nanna Zhou;
- Madhavi, Meera;
- Rockwell, Kyle;
- Shaw, Justin M;
- Brock, Jeffrey A;
- Pancaldi, Matteo;
- Angelis, Dario De;
- Capotondi, Flavio;
- Pedersoli, Emanuele;
- Nembach, Hans T;
- Keller, Mark W;
- Bonetti, Stefano;
- Fullerton, Eric E;
- Iacocca, Ezio;
- Kukreja, Roopali;
- Silva, Thomas J
Time-resolved ultrafast EUV magnetic scattering was used to test a recent
prediction of >10 km/s domain wall speeds by optically exciting a magnetic
sample with a nanoscale labyrinthine domain pattern. Ultrafast distortion of
the diffraction pattern was observed at markedly different timescales compared
to the magnetization quenching. The diffraction pattern distortion shows a
threshold-dependence with laser fluence, not seen for magnetization quenching,
consistent with a picture of domain wall motion with pinning sites. Supported
by simulations, we show that a speed of $\approx$ 66 km/s for highly curved
domain walls can explain the experimental data. While our data agree with the
prediction of extreme, non-equilibrium wall speeds locally, it differs from the
details of the theory, suggesting that additional mechanisms are required to
fully understand these effects.