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      Boundary between the thermal and statistical polarization regimes in a nuclear spin ensemble

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          Abstract

          As the number of spins in an ensemble is reduced, the statistical uctuations in its polarization eventually exceed the mean thermal polarization. This transition has now been surpassed in a number of recent nuclear magnetic resonance experiments, which achieve nanometer-scale detection volumes. Here, we measure nanometer- scale ensembles of nuclear spins in a KPF6 sample using magnetic resonance force microscopy. In particular, we investigate the transition between regimes dominated by thermal and statistical nuclear polarization. The ratio between the two types of polarization provides a measure of the number of spins in the detected ensemble.

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          Quantized conductance of point contacts in a two-dimensional electron gas

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            Nanoscale magnetic resonance imaging.

            We have combined ultrasensitive magnetic resonance force microscopy (MRFM) with 3D image reconstruction to achieve magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with resolution <10 nm. The image reconstruction converts measured magnetic force data into a 3D map of nuclear spin density, taking advantage of the unique characteristics of the "resonant slice" that is projected outward from a nanoscale magnetic tip. The basic principles are demonstrated by imaging the (1)H spin density within individual tobacco mosaic virus particles sitting on a nanometer-thick layer of adsorbed hydrocarbons. This result, which represents a 100 million-fold improvement in volume resolution over conventional MRI, demonstrates the potential of MRFM as a tool for 3D, elementally selective imaging on the nanometer scale.
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              Magnetic resonance force microscopy

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                26 June 2014
                2014-08-25
                Article
                10.1063/1.4892361
                1406.6869
                a9e35e11-9541-4628-8e10-d58776328dc2

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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                Appl. Phys. Lett. 105, 043112 (2014)
                cond-mat.mes-hall

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