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Dive into the research topics where Liam P. McGuinness is active.

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Featured researches published by Liam P. McGuinness.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2011

Quantum measurement and orientation tracking of fluorescent nanodiamonds inside living cells

Liam P. McGuinness; Yan Yan; Alastair Stacey; David A. Simpson; Liam T. Hall; D. Maclaurin; Steven Prawer; Paul Mulvaney; Jörg Wrachtrup; Frank Caruso; R. E. Scholten; Lloyd C. L. Hollenberg

Fluorescent particles are routinely used to probe biological processes. The quantum properties of single spins within fluorescent particles have been explored in the field of nanoscale magnetometry, but not yet in biological environments. Here, we demonstrate optically detected magnetic resonance of individual fluorescent nanodiamond nitrogen-vacancy centres inside living human HeLa cells, and measure their location, orientation, spin levels and spin coherence times with nanoscale precision. Quantum coherence was measured through Rabi and spin-echo sequences over long (>10 h) periods, and orientation was tracked with effective 1° angular precision over acquisition times of 89 ms. The quantum spin levels served as fingerprints, allowing individual centres with identical fluorescence to be identified and tracked simultaneously. Furthermore, monitoring decoherence rates in response to changes in the local environment may provide new information about intracellular processes. The experiments reported here demonstrate the viability of controlled single spin probes for nanomagnetometry in biological systems, opening up a host of new possibilities for quantum-based imaging in the life sciences.


Science | 2016

Nuclear magnetic resonance detection and spectroscopy of single proteins using quantum logic

Igor Lovchinsky; Alexander Sushkov; Elana Urbach; N. P. de Leon; Soonwon Choi; K. De Greve; Ruffin E. Evans; R. Gertner; Eric Bersin; Christoph Müller; Liam P. McGuinness; Fedor Jelezko; Ronald L. Walsworth; Hongkun Park; Mikhail D. Lukin

Sensing single proteins with diamonds Nuclear magnetic resonance is a powerful technique for medical imaging and the structural analysis of materials, but is usually associated with large-volume samples. Lovchinsky et al. exploited the magnetic properties of a single spin associated with a defect in diamond and manipulated it with a quantum-logic protocol. They demonstrated the magnetic resonance detection and spectroscopy of multiple nuclear species within individual ubiquitin proteins attached to a specially treated diamond surface at room temperature. Science, this issue p. 836 The quantum properties of diamond are used for magnetic resonance spectroscopy of single proteins. Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy is a powerful tool for the structural analysis of organic compounds and biomolecules but typically requires macroscopic sample quantities. We use a sensor, which consists of two quantum bits corresponding to an electronic spin and an ancillary nuclear spin, to demonstrate room temperature magnetic resonance detection and spectroscopy of multiple nuclear species within individual ubiquitin proteins attached to the diamond surface. Using quantum logic to improve readout fidelity and a surface-treatment technique to extend the spin coherence time of shallow nitrogen-vacancy centers, we demonstrate magnetic field sensitivity sufficient to detect individual proton spins within 1 second of integration. This gain in sensitivity enables high-confidence detection of individual proteins and allows us to observe spectral features that reveal information about their chemical composition.


Nature Communications | 2014

Multiple intrinsically identical single-photon emitters in the solid state

Lachlan J. Rogers; Kay D. Jahnke; Tokuyuki Teraji; L Marseglia; Christoph Müller; Boris Naydenov; Hardy Schauffert; C. Kranz; Junichi Isoya; Liam P. McGuinness; Fedor Jelezko

Emitters of indistinguishable single photons are crucial for the growing field of quantum technologies. To realize scalability and increase the complexity of quantum optics technologies, multiple independent yet identical single-photon emitters are required. However, typical solid-state single-photon sources are inherently dissimilar, necessitating the use of electrical feedback or optical cavities to improve spectral overlap between distinct emitters. Here we demonstrate bright silicon vacancy (SiV(-)) centres in low-strain bulk diamond, which show spectral overlap of up to 91% and nearly transform-limited excitation linewidths. This is the first time that distinct single-photon emitters in the solid state have shown intrinsically identical spectral properties. Our results have impact on the application of single-photon sources for quantum optics and cryptography.


Nano Letters | 2013

Detection of a few metallo-protein molecules using color centers in nanodiamonds.

Anna Ermakova; Goutam Pramanik; Jianming Cai; Gerardo Algara-Siller; Ute Kaiser; Tanja Weil; Y.-K. Tzeng; H. C. Chang; Liam P. McGuinness; Martin B. Plenio; Boris Naydenov; Fedor Jelezko

Nanometer-sized diamonds containing nitrogen-vacancy defect centers (NV) are promising nanosensors in biological environments due to their biocompatibility, bright fluorescence, and high magnetic sensitivity at ambient conditions. Here we report on the detection of ferritin molecules using magnetic noise induced by the inner paramagnetic iron as a contrast mechanism. We observe a significant reduction of both coherence and relaxation time due to the presence of ferritin on the surface of nanodiamonds. Our theoretical model is in excellent agreement with the experimental data and establishes this method as a novel sensing technology for proteins.


Nature Communications | 2014

Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy with single spin sensitivity

Christoph Müller; Xi Kong; Jianming Cai; K. Melentijević; Alastair Stacey; Matthew Markham; Daniel Twitchen; Junichi Isoya; S. Pezzagna; Jan Meijer; Jiangfeng Du; Martin B. Plenio; Boris Naydenov; Liam P. McGuinness; Fedor Jelezko

Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and magnetic resonance imaging at the ultimate sensitivity limit of single molecules or single nuclear spins requires fundamentally new detection strategies. The strong coupling regime, when interaction between sensor and sample spins dominates all other interactions, is one such strategy. In this regime, classically forbidden detection of completely unpolarized nuclei is allowed, going beyond statistical fluctuations in magnetization. Here we realize strong coupling between an atomic (nitrogen–vacancy) sensor and sample nuclei to perform nuclear magnetic resonance on four 29Si spins. We exploit the field gradient created by the diamond atomic sensor, in concert with compressed sensing, to realize imaging protocols, enabling individual nuclei to be located with Angstrom precision. The achieved signal-to-noise ratio under ambient conditions allows single nuclear spin sensitivity to be achieved within seconds.


Scientific Reports | 2012

High spatial and temporal resolution wide-field imaging of neuron activity using quantum NV-diamond

Liam T. Hall; G. C. G. Beart; Evan A. Thomas; David A. Simpson; Liam P. McGuinness; Jared H. Cole; Jonathan H. Manton; R. E. Scholten; Fedor Jelezko; Jörg Wrachtrup; Steven Petrou; Lloyd C. L. Hollenberg

A quantitative understanding of the dynamics of biological neural networks is fundamental to gaining insight into information processing in the brain. While techniques exist to measure spatial or temporal properties of these networks, it remains a significant challenge to resolve the neural dynamics with subcellular spatial resolution. In this work we consider a fundamentally new form of wide-field imaging for neuronal networks based on the nanoscale magnetic field sensing properties of optically active spins in a diamond substrate. We analyse the sensitivity of the system to the magnetic field generated by an axon transmembrane potential and confirm these predictions experimentally using electronically-generated neuron signals. By numerical simulation of the time dependent transmembrane potential of a morphologically reconstructed hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neuron, we show that the imaging system is capable of imaging planar neuron activity non-invasively at millisecond temporal resolution and micron spatial resolution over wide-fields.


Physical Review B | 2014

Electronic structure of the negatively charged silicon-vacancy center in diamond

Lachlan J. Rogers; Kay D. Jahnke; Marcus W. Doherty; Andreas Dietrich; Liam P. McGuinness; Christoph Müller; Tokuyuki Teraji; Hitoshi Sumiya; Junichi Isoya; Neil B. Manson; Fedor Jelezko

The negatively-charged silicon-vacancy (SiV


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Spectroscopy of surface-induced noise using shallow spins in diamond

Y. Romach; Christoph Müller; Thomas Unden; Lachlan J. Rogers; Taiga Isoda; Kohei M. Itoh; Matthew Markham; Alastair Stacey; Jan Meijer; S. Pezzagna; Boris Naydenov; Liam P. McGuinness; Nir Bar-Gill; Fedor Jelezko

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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Detection of atomic spin labels in a lipid bilayer using a single-spin nanodiamond probe

Stefan H. E. Kaufmann; David A. Simpson; Liam T. Hall; Viktor Perunicic; Philipp Senn; Steffen Steinert; Liam P. McGuinness; B. C. Johnson; Takeshi Ohshima; Frank Caruso; Joerg Wrachtrup; R. E. Scholten; Paul Mulvaney; Lloyd C. L. Hollenberg

) center in diamond is a promising single photon source for quantum communications and information processing. However, the centers implementation in such quantum technologies is hindered by contention surrounding its fundamental properties. Here we present optical polarization measurements of single centers in bulk diamond that resolve this state of contention and establish that the center has a


New Journal of Physics | 2012

Robust dynamical decoupling with concatenated continuous driving

Jianming Cai; Boris Naydenov; R. Pfeiffer; Liam P. McGuinness; Kay D. Jahnke; Fedor Jelezko; Martin B. Plenio; Alex Retzker

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Tokuyuki Teraji

National Institute for Materials Science

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Takeshi Ohshima

Japan Atomic Energy Agency

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Shinobu Onoda

Japan Atomic Energy Agency

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