Physicists in Leiden have built a microscope that can measure no fewer than four key properties of a material in a single scan, all with nanoscale precision. The instrument can even examine complete quantum chips, accelerating research and innovation in the field of quantum materials. The study is published in the journal Nano Letters.
Temperature, magnetism, structure, and electrical properties. These are the material characteristics that this new microscope reveals. “It almost feels like having a superpower,” says Matthijs Rog, a Ph.D. student in Kaveh Lahabi’s research group. “You look at a sample and see not only its shape but also the electrical currents, heat, and magnetism within it.”
Kaveh Lahabi, who leads the group, says, “This microscope removes the experimental bottlenecks that have long limited the study of quantum materials. This is not an idealized technique—it works on the systems we actually want to understand. Furthermore, the sensitivity of our measurements tends to impress a lot of my physicist colleagues.”