2021
DOI: 10.3390/s21165568
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Precision Magnetometers for Aerospace Applications: A Review

Abstract: Aerospace technologies are crucial for modern civilization; space-based infrastructure underpins weather forecasting, communications, terrestrial navigation and logistics, planetary observations, solar monitoring, and other indispensable capabilities. Extraplanetary exploration—including orbital surveys and (more recently) roving, flying, or submersible unmanned vehicles—is also a key scientific and technological frontier, believed by many to be paramount to the long-term survival and prosperity of humanity. A… Show more

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Cited by 51 publications
(21 citation statements)
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References 213 publications
(443 reference statements)
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“…[79] Single NV-centers have been used to detect nanotesla magnetic fields at nanoscale, [42] while ensembles of NV-centers have allowed the detection of picotesla fields. [80,81] This sensitivity to local magnetic fields has been applied to measure the spin density of biomolecules and reconstruct 3D structures, [82] as well as to detect the action potential of a single neuron in a living worm [18] (see Figure 1b). Similar action potential measurements have also been made using atomicensemble-based quantum magnetometers, which also function by monitoring Zeeman splitting.…”
Section: Quantum-enabled Sensingmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…[79] Single NV-centers have been used to detect nanotesla magnetic fields at nanoscale, [42] while ensembles of NV-centers have allowed the detection of picotesla fields. [80,81] This sensitivity to local magnetic fields has been applied to measure the spin density of biomolecules and reconstruct 3D structures, [82] as well as to detect the action potential of a single neuron in a living worm [18] (see Figure 1b). Similar action potential measurements have also been made using atomicensemble-based quantum magnetometers, which also function by monitoring Zeeman splitting.…”
Section: Quantum-enabled Sensingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These shifts can be precisely readout, for example by a polarization measurement on a probe beam. [195] Recent advances in microfabrication [193,196] and improvements in sensitivity have enabled atomic magnetometers to reach and even surpass the sensitivity of SQUIDs, [81,197] and opened up applications and in brain imaging. [194] Atomic magnetometers work at room temperature and can be miniaturized to sizes considerably smaller than SQUID magnetometers.…”
Section: Quantum-enabled Bioimagingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Biomedical magnetomyography (MMG) [145,161], magnetoencephalography (MEG) [83,121,122,128,134,[162][163][164][165][166], (fetal) magnetocardiography (MCG and fMCG) [19,20,92,120,164,167], magnetic-field imaging (MFI) [168] magnetic biomarkers [124,[169][170][171][172] plant biomagnetism [173,174] Zero-/low-field NMR [125,126,139,[175][176][177][178][179]] Geophysics [85,180] Aerospace [102,181] Laser guide stars [182] Defense and industry underwater surveillance [135], electromagnetic induction imaging [183][184][185][186] Fundamental science search for new physics beyond particle standard model [38,76,…”
Section: Typical Applications Of Atomic Magnetometersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Quantum sensors can play an important role within many technologies. For example, quantum sensing principles are already being used in applications such as GPS 64,65 and the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO), 66 impacting everyday technologies and fundamental scientific discovery. In the term "quantum sensors," we include sensing architectures that require entanglement, as well as those that do not need quantum entanglement but make optical use of quantum mechanical principles in their design.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%