Dressed-state control of effective dipolar interaction between strongly-coupled solid-state spins
Junghyun Lee, Mamiko Tatsuta, Andrew Xu, Erik Bauch, Mark J. H. Ku,, and Ronald. L. Walsworth

TL;DR
This paper introduces a dressed-state method to control dipolar interactions between solid-state spins, demonstrated with NV centers in diamond, enabling tunable spin coupling for quantum technologies.
Contribution
The work presents a novel dressed-state approach to dynamically control dipolar interactions between solid-state spins, demonstrated experimentally with NV centers in diamond.
Findings
Effective dipolar coupling can be turned on, off, or tuned using dressed states.
Ramsey spectroscopy detects changes in dipolar fields due to dressed states.
Spin-lock measurements show controllable interaction dynamics.
Abstract
Strong interactions between spins in many-body solid-state quantum system is a crucial resource for exploring and applying non-classical states. In particular, electronic spins associated with defects in diamond system are a leading platform for the study of collective quantum phenomena and for quantum technology applications. While such solid-state quantum defect systems have the advantage of scalability and operation under ambient conditions, they face the key challenge of controlling interactions between the defects spins, since the defects are spatially fixed inside the host lattice with relative positions that cannot be well controlled during fabrication. In this work, we present a dressed-state approach to control the effective dipolar coupling between solid-state spins; and then demonstrate this scheme experimentally using two strongly-coupled nitrogen vacancy (NV) centers in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiamond and Carbon-based Materials Research · Electronic and Structural Properties of Oxides · Magnetic properties of thin films
