English

A 3-dimensional scanning trapped-ion probe

Quantum Physics 2024-12-24 v1 Atomic Physics

Abstract

Single-atom quantum sensors offer high spatial resolution and high sensitivity to electric and magnetic fields. Among them, trapped ions offer exceptional performance in sensing electric fields, which has been used in particular to probe these in the proximity of metallic surfaces. However, the flexibility of previous work was limited by the use of radio-frequency trapping fields, which has restricted spatial scanning to linear translations, and calls into question whether observed phenomena are connected to the presence of the radio-frequency fields. Here, using a Penning trap instead, we demonstrate a single ion probe which offers three-dimensional position scanning at distances between 5050 μm\mu\mathrm{m} and 450450 μm\mu\mathrm{m} from a metallic surface and above a 200×200200\times200 μm2\mu\mathrm{m}^{2} area, allowing us to reconstruct static and time-varying electric as well as magnetic fields. We use this to map charge distributions on the metallic surface and noise stemming from it. The methods demonstrated here allow similar probing to be carried out on samples with a variety of materials, surface constitutions and geometries, providing a new tool for surface science.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2412.17528,
  title  = {A 3-dimensional scanning trapped-ion probe},
  author = {Tobias Sägesser and Shreyans Jain and Pavel Hrmo and Alexander Ferk and Matteo Simoni and Yingying Cui and Carmelo Mordini and Daniel Kienzler and Jonathan Home},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2412.17528},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

19 pages, 12 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-28T20:46:35.513Z