D. Farfurnik
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
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Featured researches published by D. Farfurnik.
Physical Review B | 2015
D. Farfurnik; A. Jarmola; Linh Pham; Zhi-Hui Wang; Viatcheslav V. Dobrovitski; Ronald L. Walsworth; Dmitry Budker; Nir Bar-Gill
In this study, we demonstrate significant improvements of the spin coherence time of a dense ensemble of nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers in diamond through optimized dynamical decoupling (DD). Cooling the sample down to 77 K suppresses longitudinal spin relaxation T1 effects and DD microwave pulses are used to increase the transverse coherence time T2 from ~0.7ms up to ~30ms. Furthermore, we extend previous work of single-axis (Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill) DD towards the preservation of arbitrary spin states. Following a theoretical and experimental characterization of pulse and detuning errors, we compare the performance of various DD protocols. We also identify that the optimal control scheme for preserving an arbitrary spin state is a recursive protocol, the concatenated version of the XY8 pulse sequence. The improved spin coherence might have an immediate impact on improvements of the sensitivities of ac magnetometry. Moreover, the protocol can be used on denser diamond samples to increase coherence times up to NV-NV interaction time scales, a major step towards the creation of quantum collective NV spin states.
Physical Review A | 2017
D. Farfurnik; Nati Aharon; Itsik Cohen; Y. Hovav; Alex Retzker; Nir Bar-Gill
The coherence times achieved with continuous dynamical decoupling techniques are often limited by fluctuations in the driving amplitude. In this work, we use time-dependent phase-modulated continuous driving to increase the robustness against such fluctuations in a dense ensemble of nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond. Considering realistic experimental errors in the system, we identify the optimal modulation strength, and demonstrate an improvement of an order of magnitude in the spin-preservation of arbitrary states over conventional single continuous driving. The phase-modulated driving exhibits comparable results to previously examined amplitude-modulated techniques, and is expected to outperform them in experimental systems having higher phase accuracy. The proposed technique could open new avenues for quantum information processing and many body physics, in systems dominated by high frequency spin-bath noise, for which pulsed dynamical decoupling is less effective.
Applied Physics Letters | 2017
D. Farfurnik; Nir Alfasi; Sergei Masis; Yaron Kauffmann; E. Farchi; Y. Romach; Y. Hovav; Eyal Buks; Nir Bar-Gill
The studies of many-body dynamics of interacting spin ensembles, as well as quantum sensing in solid state systems, are often limited by the need for high spin concentrations, along with efficient decoupling of the spin ensemble from its environment. In particular, for an ensemble of nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers in diamond, high conversion efficiencies between nitrogen (P1) defects and NV centers are essential while maintaining long coherence times of an NV ensemble. In this work, we study the effect of electron irradiation on the conversion efficiency and the coherence time of various types of diamond samples with different initial nitrogen concentrations. The samples were irradiated using a 200 keV transmission electron microscope. Our study reveals that the efficiency of NV creation strongly depends on the initial conversion efficiency and on the initial nitrogen concentration. The irradiation of the examined samples exhibits an order of magnitude improvement in the NV concentration (up to ∼1011 NV/cm...
arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics | 2017
E. Farchi; Yael Ebert; D. Farfurnik; G. Haim; Ron Shaar; Nir Bar-Gill
Magnetization in rock samples is crucial for paleomagnetometry research, as it harbors valuable geological information on long term processes, such as tectonic movements and the formation of oceans and continents. Nevertheless, current techniques are limited in their ability to measure high spatial resolution and high-sensitivity quantitative vectorial magnetic signatures from individual minerals and micrometer scale samples. As a result, our understanding of bulk rock magnetization is limited, specifically for the case of multi-domain minerals. In this work, we use a newly developed nitrogen-vacancy magnetic microscope, capable of quantitative vectorial magnetic imaging with optical resolution. We demonstrate direct imaging of the vectorial magnetic field of a single, multi-domain dendritic magnetite, as well as the measurement and calculation of the weak magnetic moments of an individual grain on the micron scale. These results pave the way for future applications in paleomagnetometry and for the fundam...
Journal of Optics | 2018
D. Farfurnik; A. Jarmola; Dmitry Budker; Nir Bar-Gill
Ensembles of nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers in diamond are widely used as AC magnetometers. While such measurements are usually performed using standard (XY) dynamical decoupling (DD) protocols at room temperature, we study the sensitivities achieved by utilizing various DD protocols, for measuring magnetic AC fields at frequencies in the 10-250 kHz range, at room temperature and 77 K. By performing measurements on an isotopically pure
Physical Review A | 2018
Nir Alfasi; Sergei Masis; Roni Winik; D. Farfurnik; Oleg Shtempluck; Nir Bar-Gill; Eyal Buks
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arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2017
D. Farfurnik; A. Jarmola; Dmitry Budker; Nir Bar-Gill
C sample, we find that the Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill (CPMG) protocol, which is not robust against pulse imperfections, is less efficient for magnetometry than robust XY-based sequences. The concatenation of a standard XY-based protocol may enhance the sensitivities only for measuring high-frequency fields, for which many (
Archive | 2017
Nir Alfasi; Sergei Masis; Roni Winik; D. Farfurnik; Oleg Shtempluck; Nir Bar-Gill; Eyal Buks
> 500
Proceedings of SPIE | 2016
D. Farfurnik; A. Jarmola; Linh Pham; V. V. Dobrovitski; Ronald L. Walsworth; Dmitry Budker; Nir Bar-Gill
) DD pulses are necessary and the robustness against pulse imperfections is critical. Moreover, we show that cooling is effective only for measuring low-frequency fields (~10 kHz), for which the experiment time apporaches
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2014
Linh Pham; D. Farfurnik; A. Jarmola; Zhi-Hui Wang; V. V. Dobrovitski; Ronald L. Walsworth; Dmitry Budker; Nir Bar-Gill
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