We investigate, assess, and suggest possibilities for a measurement of the
local spin susceptibility of a conducting low-dimensional electron system. The
basic setup of the experiment we envisage is a source-probe one. Locally
induced spin density (e.g. by a magnetized atomic force microscope tip) extends
in the medium according to its spin susceptibility. The induced magnetization
can be detected as a dipolar magnetic field, for instance, by an
ultra-sensitive nitrogen-vacancy center based detector, from which the spatial
structure of the spin susceptibility can be deduced. We find that
one-dimensional systems, such as semiconducting nanowires or carbon nanotubes,
are expected to yield a measurable signal. The signal in a two-dimensional
electron gas is weaker, though materials with high enough g-factor (such as
InGaAs) seem promising for successful measurements.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figure