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Skyrmion-vortex hybrid and spin wave solutions in ferromagnetic superconductors
by Shantonu Mukherjee, Amitabha Lahiri
Submission summary
| Authors (as registered SciPost users): | Amitabha Lahiri · Shantonu Mukherjee |
| Submission information | |
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| Preprint Link: | https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.00405v4 (pdf) |
| Date accepted: | June 25, 2025 |
| Date submitted: | June 18, 2025, 6:38 a.m. |
| Submitted by: | Shantonu Mukherjee |
| Submitted to: | SciPost Physics |
| Ontological classification | |
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| Academic field: | Physics |
| Specialties: |
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| Approach: | Theoretical |
Abstract
The coexistence of Ferromagnetism and superconductivity in so called ferromagnetic superconductors is an intriguing phenomenon which may lead to novel physical effects as well as applications. Here in this work we have explored the interplay of topological excitations, namely vortices and skyrmions, in ferromagnetic superconductors using a field theoretic description of such systems. In particular, numerical solutions for the continuous spin field compatible to a given vortex profile are determined in absence and presence of a Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (DMI) term. The solutions show that the spin configuration is like a skyrmion but intertwined with the vortex structure -- the radius of the the skyrmion-like solution depends on the penetration depth and also the polarity of the skyrmion depends on the sign of the winding number. Thus our solution describes a topological structure: namely a skyrmion-vortex composite. We have also determined the spin wave solutions in such systems in presence and absence of a vortex. In absence of vortex frequency and wave vector satisfy a cubic equation which leads to various interesting features. In particular, we have shown that in the low frequency regime the minimum in dispersion relation shifts from $k=0$ to a non zero $k$ value depending on the parameters. We also discuss the nature of spin wave dispersion in the $\omega \sim \Tilde{m}$ regime which shows a similar pattern in the dispersion curve. The group velocity of the spin wave would change it's sign across such a minimum which is unique to FMSC. Also, the spin wave modes around the local minimum looks like roton mode in superfluid and hence called a magnetic roton. In presence of a vortex, the spin wave amplitude is shown to vary spatially such that the profile looks like that of a N\'eel Skyrmion. Possible experimental signature of both solutions are also discussed.
Author indications on fulfilling journal expectations
- Provide a novel and synergetic link between different research areas.
- Open a new pathway in an existing or a new research direction, with clear potential for multi-pronged follow-up work
- Detail a groundbreaking theoretical/experimental/computational discovery
- Present a breakthrough on a previously-identified and long-standing research stumbling block
Published as SciPost Phys. 19, 022 (2025)
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Report #1 by Anonymous (Referee 1) on 2025-6-19 (Invited Report)
- Cite as: Anonymous, Report on arXiv:2407.00405v4, delivered 2025-06-19, doi: 10.21468/SciPost.Report.11430
Strengths
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The authors discuss a timely topic, since there has been interest recently on such composite excitations due to their potential role in creating Majorana excitations and implementing quantum computing.
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The authors investigate an interesting problem concerning superconducting electrons which are under the influence of the exchange field generated by localized moments. Such a study may find experimental relevance for rare-earth superconductors and reveals how magnetic skyrmions can be engineered in superconducting vortices.
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One other novelty of the authors’ approach is that they explored the magnon dispersion in ferromagnetic superconductors with Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction.
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The technical approach appears correct.
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The results are reasonable and interesting.
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Overall this manuscript reads well.
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This work can inspire further studies in this field and motivate revisiting the possibility of Majorana zero modes in rare-earth superconductors. Some early ideas when it comes to Majorana modes in such systems were first discussed by Martin and Morpurgo in a PRB of 2012. There, the Majorana zero modes formed flat bands. Here, instead, the authors propose a route to realize localized Majorana modes, which can be advantageous for quantum computing applications.
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This version is substantially improved compared to the previous one.
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