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Fourier magnetic imaging with nanoscale resolution and compressed sensing speed-up using electronic spins in diamond

Abstract

Optically detected magnetic resonance using nitrogen–vacancy (NV) colour centres in diamond is a leading modality for nanoscale magnetic field imaging, as it provides single electron spin sensitivity, three-dimensional resolution better than 1 nm (ref. 5) and applicability to a wide range of physical and biological samples under ambient conditions. To date, however, NV-diamond magnetic imaging has been performed using ‘real-space’ techniques, which are either limited by optical diffraction to ∼250 nm resolution or require slow, point-by-point scanning for nanoscale resolution, for example, using an atomic force microscope, magnetic tip, or super-resolution optical imaging. Here, we introduce an alternative technique of Fourier magnetic imaging using NV-diamond. In analogy with conventional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), we employ pulsed magnetic field gradients to phase-encode spatial information on NV electronic spins in wavenumber or ‘k-space’ followed by a fast Fourier transform to yield real-space images with nanoscale resolution, wide field of view and compressed sensing speed-up.National Science Foundation (U.S.)United States. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. Quantum-Assisted Sensing and Readout (QuASAR)United States. Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative. Qubit Enabled Imaging, Sensing & Metrology (QuISM

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Last time updated on 26/02/2017

This paper was published in DSpace@MIT.

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