Simon Geyer, Leon C. Camenzind, et al.
Applied Physics Letters
The diffraction limit prevents a conventional optical microscope from imaging at the nanoscale. However, nanoscale imaging of molecules is possible by exploiting an intensity-dependent molecular switch 1-3 . This switch is translated into a microscopy scheme, stimulated emission depletion microscopy 4-7 . Variants on this scheme exist 3,8-13, yet all exploit an incoherent response to the lasers. We present a scheme that relies on a coherent response to a laser. Quantum control of a two-level system proceeds via rapid adiabatic passage, an ideal molecular switch. We implement this scheme on an ensemble of quantum dots. Each quantum dot results in a bright spot in the image with extent down to 30 nm (λ/31). There is no significant loss of intensity with respect to confocal microscopy, resulting in a factor of 10 improvement in emitter position determination. The experiments establish rapid adiabatic passage as a versatile tool in the super-resolution toolbox.
Simon Geyer, Leon C. Camenzind, et al.
Applied Physics Letters
Leon C. Camenzind, Simon Geyer, et al.
Nature Electronics
Mathieu de Kruijf, Simon Geyer, et al.
Review of Scientific Instruments
Qian Ding, Andreas V. Kuhlmann, et al.
Solid-State Electronics