cryomagneters
Cryomagneters are instruments that measure magnetic fields at cryogenic temperatures, typically below 4 K. The technique exploits the principle that magnetic field gradients can influence quantum two‑level systems such as superconducting flux qubits, nitrogen‑vacancy centers in diamond, or other cryogenic electromagnetic sensors. By detecting the precession or energy shift of these systems, cryomagneters provide high‑resolution mapping of magnetic flux even in environments where conventional magnetometers would suffer from noise or thermal drift.
The earliest cryomagneters were developed alongside superconducting quantum interference devices (SQUIDs) in the 1960s, using low‑temperature
Applications span fundamental physics, where cryomagneters are used to search for axion‑like particles and study superfluid