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Magnetic field measurement, quantum

This intensity can either be monitored in a time-resolved fashion after pulsed excitation in the constant magnetic field B quantum beats, Sect. 7.2), or the time-integrated fluorescence intensity is measured as a function of B (level crossing), where the excitation may be pulsed or cw. [Pg.372]

The modern approach to measuring magnetic properties is to use a superconducting quantum interference device (a SQUID), which is highly sensitive to small magnetic fields and can make very precise measurements on small samples. [Pg.239]


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