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Multichannel imaging -- the ability to acquire images of an object through more than one imaging mode simultaneously -- has opened interesting new perspectives in areas ranging from astronomy to medicine. Visible optics and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) offer complementary advantages of resolution, speed and depth of penetration, and as such would be attractive in combination. In this paper, we take first steps towards marrying together optical and MR imaging in a class of biocompatible particulate materials constructed out of diamond. The particles are endowed with a high density of quantum defects (Nitrogen Vacancy centers) that under optical excitation fluoresce brightly in the visible, but also concurrently electron spin polarize. This allows the hyperpolarization of lattice 13C nuclei to make the particles over three-orders of magnitude brighter than in conventional MRI. Dual-mode optical and MR imaging permits immediate access to improvements in resolution and signal-to-noise especially in scattering environments. We highlight additional benefits in background-free imaging, demonstrating lock-in suppression by factors of 2 and 5 in optical and MR domains respectively. Ultimate limits could approach as much as two orders of magnitude in each domain. Finally, leveraging the ability of optical and MR imaging to simultaneously probe Fourier-reciprocal domains (real and k-space), we elucidate the ability to employ hybrid sub-sampling in both conjugate spaces to vastly accelerate dual-image acquisition, by as much as two orders of magnitude in practically relevant sparse-imaging scenarios. This is accompanied by a reduction in optical power by the same factor. Our work suggests interesting possibilities for the simultaneous optical and low-field MR imaging of targeted diamond nanoparticles.
A realization of the force-induced remnant magnetization spectroscopy (FIRMS) technique of specific biomolecular binding is presented where detection is accomplished with wide-field optical and diamond-based magnetometry using an ensemble of nitrogen
The core issue for the implementation of the diamond NV centre qubits technology is the sensitive readout of NV spin state. We have recently demonstrated the photoelectric detection of NV magnetic resonances (PDMR), anticipated to be faster and more
Quantum sensors based on nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond have emerged as a promising detection modality for nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy owing to their micron-scale detection volume and non-inductive based detection. A remaining
Optically detected magnetic resonance of nitrogen vacancy centers in diamond offers novel routes to both DC and AC magnetometry in diamond anvil cells under high pressures ($>3$ GPa). However, a serious challenge to realizing experiments has been the
Dynamic nuclear polarization via contact with electronic spins has emerged as an attractive route to enhance the sensitivity of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) beyond the traditional limits imposed by magnetic field strength and temperature. Among t