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Gigantic spin-noise gain enables magnetic resonance spectroscopy of impurity crystals

Spin noise spectroscopy is a method of magnetic resonance widely used, nowadays, in atomic and semiconductor research. Classical objects of the EPR spectroscopy - dielectrics with paramagnetic impurities - seemed to be unsuitable for this technique because of large widths of allowed optical transitions and, therefore, low specific Faraday rotation (FR). We show, however, that the FR noise detected at the wavelength of a weak optical transition (with low regular FR) may increase by many orders of magnitude as its homogeneous width decreases. This spin-noise gain effect, numerically described by the ratio of the inhomogeneous linewidth to homogeneous, relates primarily to forbidden intraconfigurational transitions of impurity ions with unfilled inner electronic shells. Specifically, for the f-f transitions of rare-earth ions in crystals, this factor may reach 10$^8$. In this paper, we report on the first successful application of spin noise spectroscopy for detecting magnetic resonance of rare-earth ions in crystals.

preprint2019arXivOpen access

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