All-optical control of long-lived nuclear spins in rare-earth doped nanoparticles
D. Serrano, J. Karlsson, A. Fossati, A. Ferrier, P. Goldner

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the all-optical control of nuclear spins in rare-earth doped nanoparticles, achieving long coherence times comparable to bulk materials, which is promising for quantum information applications.
Contribution
It reports the first observation of millisecond-long nuclear spin coherence in rare-earth doped nanoparticles with all-optical control and dynamical decoupling.
Findings
Achieved spin T2 of 2.9 ms at 5 K and 9 mT magnetic field.
First demonstration of all-optical spin dynamical decoupling in nanoparticles.
Rare-earth doped nanoparticles exhibit coherence properties comparable to bulk crystals.
Abstract
Nanoscale systems offer key capabilities for quantum technologies that include single qubit control and readout, multiple qubit gate operation, extremely sensitive and localized sensing and imaging, as well as the ability to build hybrid quantum systems. To fully exploit these functionalities, multiple degrees of freedom are highly desirable: in this respect, nanoscale systems that coherently couple to light and possess spins, allow for storage of photonic qubits or light-matter entanglement together with processing capabilities. In addition, all-optical control of spins can be possible for faster gate operations and higher spatial selectivity compared to direct RF excitation. Such systems are therefore of high interest for quantum communications and processing. However, an outstanding challenge is to preserve properties, and especially optical and spin coherence lifetimes, at the…
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