No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 February 2011
Arrays of two-dimensional magnetic bubbles in thin garnet films undergo a hexatic-toliquid transition as a function of bubble density controlled by an applied spatially uniform dc bias magnetic field that opposes the magnetization in the bubbles. The phase transition is driven by topological point defects. The bubbles are observed directly using optical microscopy and digital imaging techniques. In the presence of a linear gradient in the dc bias magnetic field the hexatic-to-liquid transition occurs spatially in the direction of the gradient. As the system goes from hexatic to liquid, a continuous decrease in bubble density accompanied by a continuous disordering of the array is observed along the gradient direction. This continuous disordering persists even after the system is allowed to equilibrate for very long periods of time, indicating that the hexatic-to-liquid transition is continuous at equilibrium. Dynamics of topological defects observed in the gradient field correspond to those observed in the uniform field.