We report an electronic magnetization measurement of a quantum point contact (QPC) based on nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. We find that NMR signals can be detected by measuring the QPC conductance under in-plane magnetic fields. This makes it possible to measure, from Knight shifts of the NMR spectra, the electronic magnetization of a QPC containing only a few electron spins. The magnetization changes smoothly with the QPC potential barrier height and peaks at the conductance plateau of 0.5 × 2e 2 /h. The observed features are well captured by a model calculation assuming a smooth potential barrier, supporting a no bound state origin of the 0.7 structure.Quantum point contact (QPC) is a short onedimensional (1D) channel connecting two electron reservoirs. Its conductance is quantized to integer multiples of 2e 2 /h, where e is electron charge and h is Planck's constant [1,2]. The conductance quantization is well understood within a model of non-interacting electrons [3]. However, experiments have shown an additional conductance feature, a shoulder-like structure at around 0.7 × 2e 2 /h termed as 0.7 structure [4,5]. Despite the simplicity of a QPC, a comprehensive understanding of the 0.7 structure is still lacking [6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19].Theories proposed to explain the 0.7 structure can be discriminated according to their predictions on the electron spin arrangement, which include spontaneous spin polarization [6,7], antiferromagnetic Wigner crystal [8], Kondo screening [9][10][11], and local spin fluctuations accompanied by van Hove singularity [12,13]. Especially in the Kondo scenario, the existence of a localized magnetic moment in the QPC is an inevitable ingredient. On one hand, early experiments observing Fano resonances suggested such presence of a local single spin trapped in a bound state regardless of magnetic fields [14]. On the other hand, an experiment measuring compressibility contradicts such bound state formation [18]. Thus, the degree of spin polarization of a QPC is one of the central issues to understand the origin of the 0.7 structure.However, most experiments[4, 5, 14-17] to date have focused on transmission properties, without the QPC spin polarization being addressed directly. Despite the recent progress in magnetic sensors [20], the magnetization measurement of a QPC containing only a few electrons is still very challenging. Recently, small magnetizations of two-dimensional electron systems (2DESs) embedded in GaAs have been measured [21][22][23] by combining techniques of current-induced nuclear spin polarization [24][25][26][27][28] and resistance (conductance) detection of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) signals of Ga and As nuclei [27][28][29]. Because of the hyperfine interaction between electronic and nuclear spins, an electronic magnetization produces an effective magnetic field for nuclei, resulting in the shift of the NMR frequency, the Knight shift. From the Knight shift, the electronic magnetization can be determined [30].A recent...