- Esposito, V;
- Zheng, XY;
- Seaberg, MH;
- Montoya, SA;
- Holladay, B;
- Reid, AH;
- Streubel, R;
- Lee, JCT;
- Shen, L;
- Koralek, JD;
- Coslovich, G;
- Walter, P;
- Zohar, S;
- Thampy, V;
- Lin, MF;
- Hart, P;
- Nakahara, K;
- Fischer, P;
- Colocho, W;
- Lutman, A;
- Decker, F-J;
- Sinha, SK;
- Fullerton, EE;
- Kevan, SD;
- Roy, S;
- Dunne, M;
- Turner, JJ
Magnetic skyrmions are topologically protected spin textures with promising prospects for applications in data storage. They can form a lattice state due to competing magnetic interactions and are commonly found in a small region of the temperature - magnetic field phase diagram. Recent work has demonstrated that these magnetic quasi-particles fluctuate at the μeV energy scale. Here, we use a coherent x-ray correlation method at an x-ray free-electron laser to investigate these fluctuations in a magnetic phase coexistence region near a first-order transition boundary where fluctuations are not expected to play a major role. Surprisingly, we find that the relaxation of the intermediate scattering function at this transition differs significantly compared to that deep in the skyrmion lattice phase. The observation of a compressed exponential behavior suggests solid-like dynamics, often associated with jamming. We assign this behavior to disorder and the phase coexistence observed in a narrow field-window near the transition, which can cause fluctuations that lead to glassy behavior.