ODMR - Optically Detected Magnetic Resonance
Learn how to implement Optically Detected Magnetic Resonance (ODMR) experiments using UC2 hardware. ODMR is a quantum sensing technique that detects magnetic resonance through changes in optical fluorescence, commonly used with nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers in diamond.
What is ODMR?
ODMR combines optical spectroscopy with magnetic resonance to detect spin transitions in color centers (like NV centers in diamond). When these quantum defects are exposed to specific microwave frequencies in the presence of a magnetic field, their fluorescence intensity changes, allowing detection of magnetic resonance without traditional RF coils.
What You'll Learn
- Principles of optically detected magnetic resonance
- Nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond
- Microwave frequency generation and control
- Magnetic field effects on spin states
- Quantum sensing fundamentals
- Fluorescence detection techniques
Tutorials in this Section
- ODMR Tutorial - Complete guide to building and operating an ODMR system with UC2
Key Components
- NV Diamond Sample: Synthetic diamond with nitrogen-vacancy centers
- Green Laser: Excitation source (typically 532nm)
- Microwave Generator: Create resonant microwave fields
- Magnetic Field Coils: Apply external magnetic fields
- Photodetector: Measure fluorescence changes
- UC2 Optical System: Guide and focus laser light
- Control Electronics: Synchronize measurements
Applications
Quantum Sensing
- Magnetic field mapping with nanoscale resolution
- Temperature sensing via spin resonance
- Electric field detection
- Pressure and stress measurements