Magnonics addresses the physical properties of spin waves and utilizes them for data processing. Scalability down to atomic dimensions, operation in the GHz-to-THz frequency range, utilization of nonlinear and nonreciprocal phenomena, and compatibility with CMOS are just a few of many advantages offered by magnons. Although magnonics is still primarily positioned in the academic domain, the scientific and technological challenges of the field are being extensively investigated, and many proof-of-concept prototypes have already been realized in laboratories. This roadmap is a product of the collective work of many authors that covers versatile spin-wave computing approaches, conceptual building blocks, and underlying physical phenomena. In particular, the roadmap discusses the computation operations with Boolean digital data, unconventional approaches like neuromorphic computing, and the progress towards magnon-based quantum computing. The article is organized as a collection of sub-sections grouped into seven large thematic sections. Each sub-section is prepared by one or a group of authors and concludes with a brief description of current challenges and the outlook of further development for each research direction.
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Recent progress in nanofabrication has led to the emergence of three-dimensional magnetic nanostructures as a vibrant field of research. This includes the study of three-dimensional arrays of interconnected magnetic nanowires with tunable artificial spin-ice properties. Prominent examples of such structures are magnetic buckyball nanoarchitectures, which consist of ferromagnetic nanowires connected at vertex positions corresponding to those of a C60 molecule. These structures can be regarded as prototypes for the study of the transition from two- to three-dimensional spin-ice lattices. In spite of their significance for three-dimensional nanomagnetism, little is known about the micromagnetic properties of buckyball nanostructures. By means of finite-element micromagnetic simulations, we investigate the magnetization structures and the hysteretic properties of several sub-micron-sized magnetic buckyballs. Similar to ordinary artificial spin-ice lattices, the array can be magnetized in a variety of zero-field states with vertices exhibiting different degrees of magnetic frustration. Remarkably, and unlike planar geometries, magnetically frustrated states can be reversibly created and dissolved by applying an external magnetic field. This easiness to insert and remove defect-like magnetic charges, made possible by the angle-selectivity of the field-induced switching of individual nanowires, demonstrates a potentially significant advantage of three-dimensional nanomagnetism compared to planar geometries. The control provided by the ability to switch between ice-rule obeying and magnetically frustrated structures could be an important feature of future applications, including magnonic devices exploiting differences in the fundamental frequencies of these configurations.
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