SciTechDaily: MIT Quantum Sensor Can Detect Electromagnetic Signals of Any 
Frequency.
https://scitechdaily.com/mit-quantum-sensor-can-detect-electromagnetic-signals-of-any-frequency/

MIT engineers expand the capabilities of these ultrasensitive nanoscale 
detectors, with potential uses for biological sensing and quantum computing.

With the ability to detect the most minute variations in magnetic or electrical 
fields, quantum sensors have enabled precision measurements in materials 
science and fundamental physics. However, these sensors have limited usefulness 
because they are only been capable of detecting a few specific frequencies of 
these fields. Now, MIT researchers have developed a method to enable such 
sensors to detect any arbitrary frequency, with no loss of their ability to 
measure nanometer-scale features.

The new method is described in a paper published in the journal Physical Review 
X by graduate student Guoqing Wang, professor of nuclear science and 
engineering and of physics Paola Cappellaro, and four others at MIT and Lincoln 
Laboratory. The team has already applied for patent protection for the new 
method.

Although quantum sensors can take many forms, at their essence they’re systems 
in which some particles are in such a delicately balanced state that they are 
affected by even tiny variations in the fields they are exposed to. These can 
take the form of neutral atoms, trapped ions, and solid-state spins, and 
research using such sensors has grown rapidly. For example, physicists use them 
to investigate exotic states of matter, including so-called time crystals and 
topological phases, while other scientists use them to characterize practical 
devices such as experimental quantum memory or computation devices. However, 
many other phenomena of interest span a much broader frequency range than 
today’s quantum sensors can detect.

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