In the field of
condensed matter physics, microwave spectroscopy is used to detect dynamic phenomena of either charges or spins at GHz frequencies (corresponding to nanosecond time scales) and energy scales in the μeV regime. Matching to these energy scales, microwave spectroscopy on solids is often performed as a function of temperature (down to
cryogenic regimes of a few K or even lower) and/or magnetic field (with fields up to several T).
Spectroscopy traditionally considers the frequency-dependent response of materials, and in the study of dielectrics microwave spectroscopy often covers a large frequency range. In contrast, for conductive samples as well as for magnetic resonance, experiments at a fixed frequency are common (using a highly sensitive
microwave resonator), but frequency-dependent measurements are also possible.
Probing charges in condensed matter physics For insulating materials (both solid and liquid), probing charge dynamics with microwaves is a part of
dielectric spectroscopy. Amongst the conductive materials,
superconductors are a material class that is often studied with microwave spectroscopy, giving information about
penetration depth (governed by the superconducting condensate),
energy gap (single-particle excitation of
Cooper pairs), and quasiparticle dynamics. Another material class that has been studied using microwave spectroscopy at low temperatures are
heavy fermion metals with
Drude relaxation rates at GHz frequencies. In the paramagnetic case, such an experiment probes the
Zeeman splitting, with a linear relation between the static external magnetic field and the frequency of the probing microwave field. A popular combination, as implemented in commercial
X-band ESR spectrometers, is approximately 0.3 T (static field) and 10 GHz (microwave frequency) for a typical material with
electron g-factor close to 2. == Applications ==