Abstract
We demonstrate a radio-frequency potassium-vapor magnetometer operating with sensitivities of 0.3 fT/ Hz at 0.5 MHz and 0.9 fT/ Hz at 1.31 MHz in the absence of radio-frequency and mu-metal or magnetic shielding. The use of spatially separated magnetometers, two voxels within the same cell, permits for the subtraction of common mode noise and the retention of a gradient signal, as from a local source. At 0.5 MHz the common mode noise was white and measured to be 3.4 fT/ Hz; upon subtraction the noise returned to the values observed when the magnetometer was shielded. At 1.31 MHz, the common mode noise was from a nearby radio station and was reduced by a factor of 33 upon subtraction, limited only by the radio signal picked up by receiver electronics. Potential applications include in-the-field low-field magnetic resonance, such as the use of nuclear quadrupole resonance for the detection of explosives.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Keder, D. A., Prescott, D. W., Conovaloff, A. W., & Sauer, K. L. (2014). An unshielded radio-frequency atomic magnetometer with sub-femtoTesla sensitivity. AIP Advances, 4(12). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4905449
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