| Literature DB >> 30199791 |
Robert J Cooper1, David W Prescott1, Garrett J Lee1, Karen L Sauer2.
Abstract
An unshielded array of 87Rb atomic magnetometers, operating close to 1 MHz, is used to attenuate interference by 42-48 dB. A sensitivity of 15 fT/Hz to a local source of signal is retained. In addition, a 2D spectroscopic technique, in which the magnetometers are repeatedly pumped and data acquired between pump times, enables a synchronously generated signal to be distinguished from an interfering signal very close in frequency; the timing and signal mimics what would be observed in a magnetic resonance echo train. Combining the interference rejection and the 2D spectroscopy techniques, a 100 fT local signal is differentiated from a 20 pT interference signal operating only 1 Hz away. A phase-encoded reference signal is used to calibrate the magnetometers in real time in the presence of interference. Key to the strong interference rejection is the accurate calibration of the reference signal across the array, obtained through electron spin resonance measurements. This calibration is found to be sensitive to atomic polarization, RF pulse duration, and direction of the excitation. The experimental parameters required for an accurate and robust calibration are discussed.Keywords: Atomic magnetometer array; Electron spin resonance; Interference rejection; Low-field magnetic resonance; RF magnetic field mapping; Unshielded detection
Year: 2018 PMID: 30199791 DOI: 10.1016/j.jmr.2018.08.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Magn Reson ISSN: 1090-7807 Impact factor: 2.229