Searching for new particles beyond the standard model is crucial for understanding several fundamental conundrums in physics and astrophysics. Several hypothetical particles can mediate exotic spin-dependent interactions between ordinary fermions, which enable laboratory searches via the detection of the interactions. Most laboratory searches utilize a macroscopic source and detector, thus allowing the detection of interactions with submillimeter force range and above. It remains a challenge to detect the interactions at shorter force ranges. Here we propose and demonstrate that a near-surface nitrogen-vacancy center in diamond can be utilized as a quantum sensor to detect the monopole-dipole interaction between an electron spin and nucleons. Our result sets a constraint for the electron-nucleon coupling, gs N g-p e g s N g p e, with the force range 0.1-23 μm. The obtained upper bound of the coupling at 20 μm is g-s Ng-pe g s N g p e < 6.24 × 10 -15 .
CITATION STYLE
Rong, X., Wang, M., Geng, J., Qin, X., Guo, M., Jiao, M., … Du, J. (2018). Searching for an exotic spin-dependent interaction with a single electron-spin quantum sensor. Nature Communications, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-03152-9
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