Giuseppe Bevilacqua
University of Siena
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Publication
Featured researches published by Giuseppe Bevilacqua.
Journal of The Optical Society of America B-optical Physics | 2007
Jacopo Belfi; Giuseppe Bevilacqua; Valerio Biancalana; S. Cartaleva; Yordanka Dancheva; L. Moi
We present encouraging results obtained with an experimental apparatus based on coherent population trapping and aimed at detecting a biological (cardiac) magnetic field in a magnetically compensated but unshielded volume. The work includes magnetic-field and magnetic-field-gradient compensation and uses differential detection to cancel common mode magnetic noise. Synchronous data acquisition with a reference (electrocardiographic or pulse-oximetric) signal makes possible improvement of the signal-to-noise ratio in off-line averaging. The setup has the significant advantages of working at room temperature with a small-size head, and the possibility of fast adjustments of the dc bias magnetic field, which makes the sensor suitable for detecting a biomagnetic signal at any orientation with respect to the axis of the head and in any position on the patients chest, which is not the case with other kinds of magnetometers.
Journal of The Optical Society of America B-optical Physics | 2007
Jacopo Belfi; Giuseppe Bevilacqua; Valerio Biancalana; Yordanka Dancheva; L. Moi
An automated magnetometer suitable for long lasting measurement under stable and controllable experimental conditions has been implemented. The device is based on Coherent Population Trapping (CPT) produced by a multi-frequency excitation. CPT resonance is observed when a frequency comb, generated by diode laser current modulation, excites Cs atoms confined in a π/4× (2.5) × 1 cm, 2 Torr N2 buffered cell. A fully optical sensor is connected through an optical fiber to the laser head allowing for truly remote sensing and minimization of the field perturbation. A detailed analysis of the CPT resonance parameters as a function of the optical detuning has been made in order to get high sensitivity measurements. The magnetic field monitoring performances and the best sensitivity obtained in a balanced differential configuration of the sensor are presented. OCIS 120.4640, 020.1670, 300.6380. This work has been submitted to JOSA B for publication [Josa B (7) 2007]An automated magnetometer suitable for long lasting measurement under stable and controllable experimental conditions has been implemented. The device is based on coherent population trapping (CPT) produced by a multifrequency excitation. CPT resonance is observed when a frequency comb, generated by diode laser current modulation, excites Cs atoms confined in a π/4×(2.5)2×1 cm3, 2 TorrN2 buffered cell. A fully optical sensor is connected through an optical fiber to the laser head allowing for truly remote sensing and minimization of the field perturbation. A detailed analysis of the CPT resonance parameters as a function of the optical detuning has been made in order to get high sensitivity measurements. The magnetic field monitoring performances and the best sensitivity obtained in a balanced differential configuration of the sensor are presented.
Journal of The Optical Society of America B-optical Physics | 2009
Jacopo Belfi; Giuseppe Bevilacqua; Valerio Biancalana; S. Cartaleva; Yordanka Dancheva; K. Khanbekyan; L. Moi
We report on a two-channel magnetometer based on nonlinear magneto-optical rotation in a Cs glass cell with buffer gas. The Cs atoms are optically pumped and probed by free running diode lasers tuned to the D2 line. A wide frequency modulation of the pump laser is used to produce both synchronous Zeeman optical pumping and hyperfine repumping. The magnetometer works in an unshielded environment, and a spurious signal from distant magnetic sources is rejected by means of differential measurement. In this regime the magnetometer simultaneously gives the magnetic field modulus and the field difference. Rejection of the common-mode noise allows for high-resolution magnetometry with a sensitivity of 2 pT/sqrt Hz. This sensitivity, in conjunction with long-term stability and a large bandwidth, makes it possible to detect water proton magnetization and its free induction decay in a measurement volume of 5 cm3.
Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2009
Giuseppe Bevilacqua; Valerio Biancalana; Yordanka Dancheva; L. Moi
An all-optical atomic magnetometer is used to detect a proton free-precession signal from a water sample polarized in a 0.7 T field and remotely analyzed in a 4 microT field. Nuclear spins are manipulated either by pi/2 pulses or by non-adiabatic rotation. The magnetometer operates at room temperature, in an unshielded environment and has a dual-channel sensor for differential measurements.
Applied Physics B | 2016
Giuseppe Bevilacqua; Valerio Biancalana; P. Chessa; Yordanka Dancheva
A multichannel atomic magnetometer operating in an unshielded environment is described and characterised. The magnetometer is based on
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2010
Jacopo Belfi; Giuseppe Bevilacqua; Valerio Biancalana; R. Cecchi; Yordanka Dancheva; L. Moi
Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2016
Giuseppe Bevilacqua; Valerio Biancalana; Andrei Ben-Amar Baranga; Yordanka Dancheva; Claudio Rossi
D_1
Physical Review A | 2012
Giuseppe Bevilacqua; Valerio Biancalana; Yordanka Dancheva; L. Moi
Annual reports on NMR spectroscopy | 2013
Giuseppe Bevilacqua; Valerio Biancalana; Yordanka Dancheva; L. Moi
D1 optical pumping and
Journal of Mathematical Physics | 2011
Giuseppe Bevilacqua; Valerio Biancalana; Yordanka Dancheva; Toufik Mansour; L. Moi