A long-ranged dynamic interaction between ferromagnetic films separated by normal-metal spacers is reported, which is communicated by nonequilibrium spin currents. It is measured by ferromagnetic resonance (FMR) and explained by an adiabatic spin-pump theory. In FMR the spin-pump mechanism of spatially separated magnetic moments leads to an appreciable increase in the FMR line width when the resonance fields are well apart, and results in a dramatic line-width narrowing when the FMR fields approach each other.PACS numbers: 75.40. Gb,75.70.Cn,76.50.+g,75.30.Et The giant magnetoresistance [1] accompanying realignment of magnetic configurations in metallic multilayers by an external magnetic field is routinely employed in magnetic read heads and is essential for high-density nonvolatile magnetic random-access memories. These typically consist of ferromagnetic/normal/ferromagnetic (F/N/F ) metal hybrid structures, i.e., magnetic bilayers which are an essential building block of the so called spin valves. The static Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yosida (RKKY) interlayer exchange between ferromagnets in magnetic multilayers [2] is suppressed in these devices by a sufficiently thick nonmagnetic spacer N or a tunnel barrier. The interest of the community shifts increasingly from the static to the dynamic properties of the magnetization [3]. This is partly motivated by curiosity, partly by the fact that the magnetization switching characteristics in memory devices is a real technological issue. A good grasp of the fundamental physics of the magnetization dynamics becomes of essential importance to sustain the exponential growth of device performance factors.In this Letter we study the largely unexplored dynamics of magnetic bilayers in a regime when there is no discernible static interaction between the magnetization vectors. Surprisingly, the magnetizations still turn out to be coupled, which we explain by emission and absorption of nonequilibrium spin currents. Under special conditions the two magnetizations are resonantly coupled by spin currents and carry out a synchronous motion, quite analogous to two connected pendulums. This dynamic interaction is an entirely new concept and physically very different from the static RKKY coupling. E.g., the former does not oscillate as a function of thickness and its range is exponentially limited by the spin-flip relaxation length of spacer layers and algebraically by the elastic mean free path. This coupling can have profound effects on magnetic relaxation and switching behavior in hybrid structures and devices.The unit vector m = M/M of the magnetization M(t) of a ferromagnet changes its direction in the presence of a noncollinear magnetic field. The motion of m in a single domain is described by the Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert (LLG) equationwith γ being the absolute value of the gyromagnetic ratio. The first term on the right-hand side represents the torque induced by the effective magnetic field H eff = −∂F/∂M, where the free-energy functional F [M] consists of the Zeeman energy, ma...