Exotic topological spin textures such as emergent magnetic monopole/antimonopoles (hedgehog/antihedgehog) in the metastable extended skyrmion-strings, attract much attention in the fundamental physics owing to their novel electromagnetic properties. However, the… Click to show full abstract
Exotic topological spin textures such as emergent magnetic monopole/antimonopoles (hedgehog/antihedgehog) in the metastable extended skyrmion-strings, attract much attention in the fundamental physics owing to their novel electromagnetic properties. However, the direct imaging of such spin textures is lacking. Here, we report the real-space observation of emergent magnetic monopole involved in extended skyrmion-strings by Lorentz transmission electron microscopy (TEM) in combination with micromagnetic simulations. The in-plane extended skyrmion-strings are observed directly by Lorentz TEM to accompany the topological hedgehog-like defects, where the skyrmion-string terminates or merges with another skyrmion-string, as well as the surface-related defects where skyrmion-string bends 90° and ends on the surface. We also demonstrate the transformation of a metastablized lattice of out-of-plane short skyrmion-strings into an in-plane array of extended skyrmion-strings by tuning the magnitude of oblique fields in a room-temperature helimagnet, revealing the stability of such topological spin textures and possibility to control them.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.