The narrow optical transitions and long spin coherence times of rare earth ions in crystals make them desirable for a number of applications ranging from solid-state spectroscopy and laser physics to quantum information processing. However, investigations of these features have not been possible at the single-ion level. Here we show that the combination of cryogenic high-resolution laser spectroscopy with optical microscopy allows one to spectrally select individual praseodymium ions in yttrium orthosilicate. Furthermore, this spectral selectivity makes it possible to resolve neighbouring ions with a spatial precision of the order of 10â ‰nm. In addition to elaborating on the essential experimental steps for achieving this long-sought goal, we demonstrate state preparation and read out of the three ground-state hyperfine levels, which are known to have lifetimes of the order of hundred seconds. © 2014 Macmillan Publishers Limited.
CITATION STYLE
Utikal, T., Eichhammer, E., Petersen, L., Renn, A., Götzinger, S., & Sandoghdar, V. (2014). Spectroscopic detection and state preparation of a single praseodymium ion in a crystal. Nature Communications, 5. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms4627
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