Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Georg Kucsko is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Georg Kucsko.


Nature | 2013

Nanometre-scale thermometry in a living cell

Georg Kucsko; Peter Maurer; Norman Yao; Michael Kubo; Hyungi Noh; Peggy Lo; Hongkun Park; Mikhail D. Lukin

Sensitive probing of temperature variations on nanometre scales is an outstanding challenge in many areas of modern science and technology. In particular, a thermometer capable of subdegree temperature resolution over a large range of temperatures as well as integration within a living system could provide a powerful new tool in many areas of biological, physical and chemical research. Possibilities range from the temperature-induced control of gene expression and tumour metabolism to the cell-selective treatment of disease and the study of heat dissipation in integrated circuits. By combining local light-induced heat sources with sensitive nanoscale thermometry, it may also be possible to engineer biological processes at the subcellular level. Here we demonstrate a new approach to nanoscale thermometry that uses coherent manipulation of the electronic spin associated with nitrogen–vacancy colour centres in diamond. Our technique makes it possible to detect temperature variations as small as 1.8 mK (a sensitivity of 9 mK Hz−1/2) in an ultrapure bulk diamond sample. Using nitrogen–vacancy centres in diamond nanocrystals (nanodiamonds), we directly measure the local thermal environment on length scales as short as 200 nanometres. Finally, by introducing both nanodiamonds and gold nanoparticles into a single human embryonic fibroblast, we demonstrate temperature-gradient control and mapping at the subcellular level, enabling unique potential applications in life sciences.


Science | 2012

Room-Temperature Quantum Bit Memory Exceeding One Second

Peter Maurer; Georg Kucsko; Christian Latta; Liang Jiang; Norman Yao; Steven D. Bennett; Fernando Pastawski; David Hunger; Nicholas Chisholm; Matthew Markham; Daniel Twitchen; J. I. Cirac; Mikhail D. Lukin

Extending Quantum Memory Practical applications in quantum communication and quantum computation require the building blocks—quantum bits and quantum memory—to be sufficiently robust and long-lived to allow for manipulation and storage (see the Perspective by Boehme and McCarney). Steger et al. (p. 1280) demonstrate that the nuclear spins of 31P impurities in an almost isotopically pure sample of 28Si can have a coherence time of as long as 192 seconds at a temperature of ∼1.7 K. In diamond at room temperature, Maurer et al. (p. 1283) show that a spin-based qubit system comprised of an isotopic impurity (13C) in the vicinity of a color defect (a nitrogen-vacancy center) could be manipulated to have a coherence time exceeding one second. Such lifetimes promise to make spin-based architectures feasible building blocks for quantum information science. Defects in diamond can be operated as quantum memories at room temperature. Stable quantum bits, capable both of storing quantum information for macroscopic time scales and of integration inside small portable devices, are an essential building block for an array of potential applications. We demonstrate high-fidelity control of a solid-state qubit, which preserves its polarization for several minutes and features coherence lifetimes exceeding 1 second at room temperature. The qubit consists of a single 13C nuclear spin in the vicinity of a nitrogen-vacancy color center within an isotopically purified diamond crystal. The long qubit memory time was achieved via a technique involving dissipative decoupling of the single nuclear spin from its local environment. The versatility, robustness, and potential scalability of this system may allow for new applications in quantum information science.


Nature | 2017

Observation of discrete time-crystalline order in a disordered dipolar many-body system

Soonwon Choi; Joonhee Choi; Renate Landig; Georg Kucsko; Hengyun Zhou; Junichi Isoya; Fedor Jelezko; Shinobu Onoda; Hitoshi Sumiya; Vedika Khemani; Curt von Keyserlingk; Norman Yao; Eugene Demler; Mikhail D. Lukin

Understanding quantum dynamics away from equilibrium is an outstanding challenge in the modern physical sciences. Out-of-equilibrium systems can display a rich variety of phenomena, including self-organized synchronization and dynamical phase transitions. More recently, advances in the controlled manipulation of isolated many-body systems have enabled detailed studies of non-equilibrium phases in strongly interacting quantum matter; for example, the interplay between periodic driving, disorder and strong interactions has been predicted to result in exotic ‘time-crystalline’ phases, in which a system exhibits temporal correlations at integer multiples of the fundamental driving period, breaking the discrete time-translational symmetry of the underlying drive. Here we report the experimental observation of such discrete time-crystalline order in a driven, disordered ensemble of about one million dipolar spin impurities in diamond at room temperature. We observe long-lived temporal correlations, experimentally identify the phase boundary and find that the temporal order is protected by strong interactions. This order is remarkably stable to perturbations, even in the presence of slow thermalization. Our work opens the door to exploring dynamical phases of matter and controlling interacting, disordered many-body systems.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Depolarization Dynamics in a Strongly Interacting Solid-State Spin Ensemble

Joonhee Choi; Soonwon Choi; Georg Kucsko; Peter Maurer; Brendan Shields; Hitoshi Sumiya; Shinobu Onoda; Junichi Isoya; Eugene Demler; Fedor Jelezko; Norman Yao; Mikhail D. Lukin

We study the depolarization dynamics of a dense ensemble of dipolar interacting spins, associated with nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond. We observe anomalously fast, density-dependent, and nonexponential spin relaxation. To explain these observations, we propose a microscopic model where an interplay of long-range interactions, disorder, and dissipation leads to predictions that are in quantitative agreement with both current and prior experimental results. Our results pave the way for controlled many-body experiments with long-lived and strongly interacting ensembles of solid-state spins.


Archive | 2013

Solid-state quantum memory based on a nuclear spin coupled to an electronic spin

Georg Kucsko; Peter Maurer; Liang Jiang; Norman Yao; Mikhail D. Lukin


Archive | 2014

Nanometer Scale Quantum Thermometer

Peter Maurer; Hyun Ji Noh; Georg Kucsko; Mikhail D. Lukin; Hongkun Park; Minako Kubo


Physical Review Letters | 2018

Critical Thermalization of a Disordered Dipolar Spin System in Diamond

Georg Kucsko; Soonwon Choi; Joonhee Choi; Peter Maurer; Hengyun Zhou; Renate Landig; Hitoshi Sumiya; Shinobu Onoda; Junich Isoya; Fedor Jelezko; Eugene Demler; Norman Yao; Mikhail D. Lukin


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2012

Room temperature solid-state quantum bit with second-long memory

Georg Kucsko; Peter Maurer; Christian Latta; David Hunger; Liang Jiang; Fernando Pastawski; Norman Yao; Steven Bennet; Daniel Twitchen; Ignacio Cirac; Mikhail D. Lukin


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017

Discrete time-crystalline order in black diamond

Hengyun Zhou; Soonwon Choi; Joonhee Choi; Renate Landig; Georg Kucsko; Junichi Isoya; Fedor Jelezko; Shinobu Onoda; Hitoshi Sumiya; Vedika Khemani; Curt von Keyserlingk; Norman Yao; Eugene Demler; Mikhail D. Lukin


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016

Slow thermalization in disordered dipolar spin systems

Joonhee Choi; Georg Kucsko; Soonwon Choi; Peter Maurer; Nathalie de Leon; Norman Yao; Fedor Jelezko; Junichi Isoya; Mikhail Lukin

Collaboration


Dive into the Georg Kucsko's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge