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Abstract
The presence of multiple competing periodicities may result in a system to go through states with modulated periodicities, an example of which is the self-similar staircase-like structure called the Devil’s Staircase. Herein we report on a novel staircase structure of domain periodicity in an amorphous and centrosymmetric Fe/Gd magnetic thin film system wherein the reciprocal space wavevector Q due to the ordered stripe domains does not evolve continuously, rather exhibits a staircase structure. Resonant X-ray scattering experiments show jumps in the periodicity of the stripe domains as a function of an external magnetic field. When resolved in components, the length-scale step change along Qx was found to be an integral multiple of a minimum step height of 7 nm, which resembles closely to the exchange length of the system. Modeling the magnetic texture in the Fe/Gd system as an achiral spin arrangement, we have been able to reproduce the steps in the magnetization using a Landau-Lifshitz spin dynamics calculation. Our results indicate that anisotropy and not the dipolar interaction is the dominant cause for the staircase pattern, thereby revealing the effect of achiral magnetism.
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1 Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Advanced Light Source, Berkeley, USA (GRID:grid.184769.5) (ISNI:0000 0001 2231 4551)
2 School of Physics, Sun Yat-Sen University, Center for Neutron Science and Technology, Guangzhou, China (GRID:grid.12981.33) (ISNI:0000 0001 2360 039X)
3 University of California San Diego, Center for Memory and Recording Research, La Jolla, USA (GRID:grid.266100.3) (ISNI:0000 0001 2107 4242)
4 Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Materials Sciences Division, Berkeley, USA (GRID:grid.184769.5) (ISNI:0000 0001 2231 4551); University of California Santa Cruz, Department of Physics, Santa Cruz, USA (GRID:grid.205975.c) (ISNI:0000 0001 0740 6917)
5 Augusta University, Department of Physics and Biophysics, Augusta, USA (GRID:grid.410427.4) (ISNI:0000 0001 2284 9329); University of California, Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, Santa Barbara, USA (GRID:grid.133342.4) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 9676)