RESUMO
Magnetic nanowires (NWs) are essential building blocks of spintronics devices as they offer tunable magnetic properties and anisotropy through their geometry. While the synthesis and compositional control of NWs have seen major improvements, considerable challenges remain for the characterization of local magnetic features at the nanoscale. Here, we demonstrate nonperturbative field distribution mapping in ultrascaled magnetic nanowires with diameters down to 6 nm by scanning nitrogen-vacancy magnetometry. This enables localized, minimally invasive magnetic imaging with sensitivity down to 3 µT Hz-1/2. The imaging reveals the presence of weak magnetic inhomogeneities inside in-plane magnetized nanowires that are largely undetectable with standard metrology and can be related to local fluctuations of the NWs' saturation magnetization. In addition, the strong magnetic field confinement in the nanowires allows for the study of the interaction between the stray magnetic field and the nitrogen-vacancy sensor, thus clarifying the contrasting formation mechanisms for technologically relevant magnetic nanostructures.