A Swedish research team has successfully created a magnetic soliton – a spin torque-generated nano-droplet that could lead to technological innovation in such areas as mobile telecommunications.

First theorized 35 years ago, the magnetic nano-droplet was created in a modified spintronic oscillator by a team from KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm and the University of Gothenburg. The breakthrough was published in the March 15 issue of Science.

Johan Ã…kerman, a professor in the Department of Âé¶¹ÒùÔºics, Gothenburg University, and associated guest researcher at KTH, is presenting the findings this week at the American Âé¶¹ÒùÔºical Society's March Meeting in Baltimore. Ã…kerman says that as early as 2010, the team began to modify spintronic oscillators in order to prove that magnetic nano-droplets exist.

The results of the research, which has been ongoing for two years, have been patented by the research team. Majid Mohseni, a researcher at KTH who defended the team research in December 2012, says that the findings could have significant impact.

"This will open up completely new possibilities in nano-magnetism and spintronics. Magnetic nano-droplets have great potential to translate into different applications," Mohseni says.

In , magnetic nano-droplets present opportunities to replace , such as mobile phones and wireless networks, with much smaller, less expensive and more resource-efficient components.

Solitons, or that behave like particles and retain their shape when moving at a constant speed, have been used for long distance, high speed . Scientists have long believed that they exist in magnetic environments, but until now they had never been observed.

The droplets take up a space of about 50 to 100 nanometers on a piece of . At their centre, magnetization points towards the opposite direction, both against the surrounding spin (a quantum physical property) and the applied magnetic field.

More information: Spin Torque–Generated Magnetic Droplet Solitons, Science 15 March 2013: Vol. 339 no. 6125 pp. 1295-1298

Journal information: Science