Controlling spin relaxation with a cavity
A. Bienfait, J.J. Pla, Y. Kubo, X. Zhou, M. Stern, C.C. Lo, C.D. Weis,, T. Schenkel, D. Vion, D. Esteve, J.J.L. Morton, and P. Bertet

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that coupling donor spins in silicon to a high-Q microwave cavity can dramatically enhance spin relaxation via spontaneous emission, enabling control over spin dynamics for quantum technologies.
Contribution
First experimental realization of cavity-controlled spin relaxation in solids, showing energy relaxation can be engineered and enhanced using cavity quantum electrodynamics principles.
Findings
Spin relaxation rate increased by three orders of magnitude at cavity resonance
Spontaneous emission becomes the dominant relaxation mechanism for spins
Energy relaxation can be controlled on-demand using cavity tuning
Abstract
Spontaneous emission of radiation is one of the fundamental mechanisms by which an excited quantum system returns to equilibrium. For spins, however, spontaneous emission is generally negligible compared to other non-radiative relaxation processes because of the weak coupling between the magnetic dipole and the electromagnetic field. In 1946, Purcell realized that the spontaneous emission rate can be strongly enhanced by placing the quantum system in a resonant cavity -an effect which has since been used extensively to control the lifetime of atoms and semiconducting heterostructures coupled to microwave or optical cavities, underpinning single-photon sources. Here we report the first application of these ideas to spins in solids. By coupling donor spins in silicon to a superconducting microwave cavity of high quality factor and small mode volume, we reach for the first time the regime…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtomic and Subatomic Physics Research · Quantum and electron transport phenomena · Quantum optics and atomic interactions
