Sebastian Knauer (Vienna): From Quantum Sensing to Spin Waves: Building Blocks for Hybrid Quantum Technologies

Donnerstag, 18. Juni 2026 15:15

Ort: Ernst-Mach-Hörsaal, Boltzmanngasse 5, 2. Stock

Hybrid quantum systems combine complementary degrees of freedom, such as spins, spin waves, and single photons, to exploit their distinct advantages in coherence, nonlinearity, and interfacing. Realising them demands solid-state platforms whose materials, models, and propagating excitations remain controllable beyond idealised conditions. This colloquium traces that goal through selected results from my research. In solid-state quantum sensing, nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centres in diamond serve as embedded probes of fabrication-induced strain and electric fields in nanostructures [1] and as adaptive magnetometers that reach high sensitivity, with, on average, a single detected photon per readout [2]. In cryogenic magnonics, I then turn to propagating spin-wave spectroscopy in nanometre-thick YIG films at millikelvin temperatures [3], together with k-selective electrical-to-magnon transduction that links realistic nanoantenna near-fields to propagating spin-wave dynamics [4]. The same spin-transport principles extend beyond ordered magnets: in organic free radicals, paramagnon-polaritons propagate over millimetre ranges [5]. As an outlook, I will sketch how these lines converge: combining millikelvin Brillouin light scattering, NV-based quantum sensing, and adaptive models continuously refined from measured data, building on data-driven Hamiltonian learning [6], toward hybrid opto-magnonic quantum systems.

[1] S. Knauer et al., npj Quantum Inf. 6, 50 (2020).
[2] R. Santagati*, A. A. Gentile*, S. Knauer* et al., Phys. Rev. X 9, 021019 (2019).
[3] S. Knauer et al., J. Appl. Phys. 133, 143905 (2023).
[4] A. Höfinger, …, S. Knauer, Adv. Phys. Res. e00211 (2026).
[5] S. Knauer et al., under review (2026); arXiv:2511.10294.
[6] A. A. Gentile*, B. Flynn*, S. Knauer* et al., Nat. Phys. 17, 837 (2021).

Location:

Ernst-Mach-Hörsaal, Boltzmanngasse 5, 2. Stock

Foto: Barbara Mair