Topological transport of deconfined hedgehogs in magnets
ORAL
Abstract
We theoretically investigate the dynamics of magnetic hedgehogs, which are three-dimensional topological spin textures that exist in common magnets, focusing on their transport properties and connections to spintronics. We show that fictitious magnetic monopoles carried by hedgehog textures obey a topological conservation law, based on which a hydrodynamic theory is developed. In the high-temperature (paramagnet) regime, the topological stability of the hedgehog flows results in an algebraically decaying drag signal in nonlocal transport measurements. The bulk-edge correspondence between hedgehog number and skyrmion number, the fictitious electric charges arising from magnetic dynamics, and the analogy between the low-temperature bound states of hedgehogs and the quark confinement in quantum chromodynamics are also discussed. Our study points to a practical potential in utilizing hedgehog flows for long-range neutral signal propagation or manipulation of skyrmion textures in three-dimensional magnetic materials.
*This work is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences under Award No. DE-SC0012190.
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Presenters
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Ji Zou
- University of California, Los Angeles