Ultrafast opto-magnetic effects induced by nitrogen-vacancy centers in
diamond crystals
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2206.09077v1
- Date: Sat, 18 Jun 2022 00:56:21 GMT
- Title: Ultrafast opto-magnetic effects induced by nitrogen-vacancy centers in
diamond crystals
- Authors: Ryosuke Sakurai, Yuta Kainuma, Toshu An, Hidemi Shigekawa, and Muneaki
Hase
- Abstract summary: We investigate ultrafast opto-magnetic effects in diamond crystals containing nitrogen-vacancy NV centers.
The spin ensemble from diamond NV centers induces an inverse Cotton-Mouton effect in the form of a sub-picosecond optical response.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- Abstract: The current generation of quantum sensing technologies using color centers in
diamond crystals is primarily based on the principle that the resonant
microwave frequency of the luminescence between quantum levels of the
nitrogen-vacancy (NV) center varies with temperature, electric and magnetic
fields. This principle enables us to measure, for instance, magnetic and
electric fields, as well as local temperature with nanometer resolution in
conjunction with a scanning probe microscope (SPM). However, the time
resolution of conventional quantum sensing technologies has been limited to
microseconds due to the limited luminescence lifetime. Here, we investigate
ultrafast opto-magnetic effects in diamond crystals containing nitrogen-vacancy
NV centers to improve the time resolution of quantum sensing to sub-picosecond
time scales. The spin ensemble from diamond NV centers induces an inverse
Cotton-Mouton effect (ICME) in the form of a sub-picosecond optical response in
a femtosecond pump-probe measurement. The helicity and quadratic power
dependence of the ICME can be interpreted as a second-order opto-magnetic
effect in which ensembles of NV electron spins act as a source for the ICME.
The results provide fundamental guidelines for enabling high-resolution
spatial-time quantum sensing technologies when combined with SPM techniques.
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