Amphithéâtre Maurice Halbwachs, Site Marcelin Berthelot
En libre accès, dans la limite des places disponibles
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Résumé

Quantum systems respond to illumination by a monochromatic field by emitting some signals that are phase-coherent with the driving tone, arising from the oscillating dipole induced on the emitters, and some signals that are incoherent (called fluorescence), arising from cycles of absorption/spontaneous emission undergone by each individual emitter. Atoms and molecules are routinely detected by their fluorescence, with important applications in quantum technology and fluorescence microscopy. Spins, on the other hand, are usually detected by the coherent component of their response, either in continuous-wave or pulsed magnetic resonance. Indeed, fluorescence detection requires emitters with a sufficiently large radiative decay rate, and also suitable detectors able to count individual photons, two major issues for spins that have a weak magnetic dipole transition and emit at rf or microwave frequencies where single photon detection is problematic. Here, using superconducting quantum devices, we overcome these issues and demonstrate the detection of a small ensemble of donor spins in silicon by their fluorescence at microwave frequency, at millikelvin temperatures. We enhance the spin radiative decay rate by coupling them to a high-quality-factor and small-mode-volume superconducting resonator [1], and we connect the device output to a newly-developed microwave single photon counter based on a superconducting qubit [2]. We discuss the potential of fluorescence detection as a novel methodology for magnetic resonance spectroscopy of small numbers of spins.

References

[1] A. Bienfait et al., Nature 531, 74 (2016).

[2] R. Lescanne et al., Phys. Rev. X 10, 021038 (2020).

Intervenants

Patrice Bertet

Service de Physique de l'état condensé, université Paris-Saclay, CEA Saclay et CNRS