Quantum nonlinear spectroscopy of single nuclear spins
Jonas Meinel, Vadim Vorobyov, Ping Wang, Boris Yavkin, Matthias, Pfender, Hitoshi Sumiya, Shinobu Onoda, Junichi Isoya, Ren-Bao Liu, Joerg, Wrachtrup

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the measurement of fourth-order correlations in single nuclear spins using quantum nonlinear spectroscopy with an atomic quantum sensor, revealing new capabilities beyond traditional methods.
Contribution
It is the first to experimentally extract higher-order correlations of single nuclear spins, advancing quantum sensing and spectroscopy techniques.
Findings
Successfully measured fourth-order correlations of single nuclear spins.
Differentiated nuclear spins from AC fields using higher-order correlations.
Enhanced spectral resolution through quantum nonlinear spectroscopy.
Abstract
Nonlinear spectroscopy is widely used for studying physical systems. Conventional nonlinear optical spectroscopy and magnetic resonance spectroscopy, which use classical probes such as electromagnetic waves, can only access certain types of correlations in a quantum system. The idea of quantum nonlinear spectroscopy was recently proposed to use quantum probes such as entangled photons to achieve sensitivities and resolutions beyond the classical limits. It is shown that quantum sensing can extract arbitrary types and orders of correlations in a quantum system by first quantum-entangling a sensor and the object and then measuring the sensor. Quantum sensing has been applied to achieve nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) of single atoms and the second-order correlation spectroscopy has been adopted to enhance the spectral resolution. However, quantum nonlinear spectroscopy (i.e., the…
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