Optimized Condition for Buffer Gas in Optical-Pumped Magnetometer Operated at Room Temperature
スポンサーリンク
概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
The optimal buffer-gas condition for achieving low noise in room temperature optical-pumped magnetometers (OPMs) was determined. To find this optimal condition, various buffer gases (helium, neon, argon, and nitrogen) filled in cesium cells at pressures of 1, 10, 50, 300, or 1000 Torr were tested. Magnetic-resonance signal was detected by sweeping rf frequency, and maximum intensity ($I_{\text{max}}$) and line width ($\Delta f$) in the magnetic-resonance spectra were measured. As an appropriate figure of merit for OPMs, the “$\alpha$ value” (i.e., $I_{\text{max}}/\Delta f$) is defined. It was found that the $\alpha$ value of the cells decreased as gas pressure increased. The $\alpha$ value obtained from the cell filled with neon gas (at 1 Torr) at optimal rf field of 50 nT was the largest. It was inferred from these results that the spin-destruction collision between cesium atoms and the buffer gas has a significant influence on the $\alpha$ value.
- 2010-08-25
著者
-
Kandori Akihiko
Advanced Research Laboratory Hitachi Ltd
-
Fukuda Kyoya
Japan Niihama National College of Technology, Institute of National Colleges of Technology, Niihama, Ehime 792-8580, Japan
-
Kawabata Ryuzo
Advanced Research Laboratory, Hitachi, Ltd., Kokubunji, Tokyo 185-8601, Japan
関連論文
- Liquid Phase Immunoassay Using AC Susceptibility Measurement of Magnetic Markers
- Liquid-Phase Detection of Biological Targets with Magnetic Marker and Superconducting Quantum Interference Device
- Design of Pickup Coil Made of Litz Wire and Cooled at 77 K for High Sensitive Measurement of AC Magnetic Fields
- Optimized Condition for Buffer Gas in Optical-Pumped Magnetometer Operated at Room Temperature
- Improvement of an Optically Pumped Magnetometer Using a Combination of D and D Transitions
- An Increase in Right Atrial Magnetic Strength Is a Novel Predictor of Recurrence of Atrial Fibrillation After Radiofrequency Catheter Ablation
- Two-Dimensional Gradiometer