106 research outputs found
Suppression of collisional shifts in a strongly interacting lattice clock
Optical lattice clocks have the potential for extremely high frequency
stability owing to the simultaneous interrogation of many atoms, but this
precision may come at the cost of systematic inaccuracy due to atomic
interactions. Density-dependent frequency shifts can occur even in a clock that
uses fermionic atoms if they are subject to inhomogeneous optical excitation
[1, 2]. Here we present a seemingly paradoxical solution to this problem. By
dramatically increasing the strength of atomic interactions, we suppress
collisional shifts in lattice sites containing > 1 atoms; strong
interactions introduce an energy splitting into the system, and evolution into
a many-particle state in which collisions occur is inhibited. We demonstrate
the effectiveness of this approach with the JILA Sr lattice clock by reducing
both the collisional frequency shift and its uncertainty by more than a factor
of ten [3], to the level of . This result eliminates the compromise
between precision and accuracy in a many-particle system, since both will
continue to improve as the particle number increases.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figure
Measurement of Linear Stark Interference in 199Hg
We present measurements of Stark interference in the 6
6 transition in Hg, a process whereby a static electric field
mixes magnetic dipole and electric quadrupole couplings into an electric
dipole transition, leading to -linear energy shifts similar to those
produced by a permanent atomic electric dipole moment (EDM). The measured
interference amplitude, = = (5.8 1.5) (kV/cm), agrees with relativistic, many-body predictions and
confirms that earlier central-field estimates are a factor of 10 too large.
More importantly, this study validates the capability of the Hg EDM
search apparatus to resolve non-trivial, controlled, and sub-nHz Larmor
frequency shifts with EDM-like characteristics.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, 1 table; revised in response to reviewer comment
Improved limit on the permanent electric dipole moment of 199Hg
We report the results of a new experimental search for a permanent electric
dipole moment of 199Hg utilizing a stack of four vapor cells. We find d(199Hg)
= (0.49 \pm 1.29_stat \pm 0.76_syst) x 10^{-29} e cm, and interpret this as a
new upper bound, |d(199Hg)| < 3.1 x 10^{-29} e cm (95% C.L.). This result
improves our previous 199Hg limit by a factor of 7, and can be used to set new
constraints on CP violation in physics beyond the standard model.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. additional reference, minor edits in response to
reviewer comment
Full phase stabilization of a Yb:fiber femtosecond frequency comb via high-bandwidth transducers
We present full phase stabilization of an amplified Yb:fiber femtosecond
frequency comb using an intra-cavity electro-optic modulator and an
acousto-optic modulator. These transducers provide high servo bandwidths of 580
kHz and 250 kHz for frep and fceo, producing a robust and low phase noise fiber
frequency comb. The comb was self-referenced with an f - 2f interferometer and
phase locked to an ultra-stable optical reference used for the JILA Sr optical
clock at 698 nm, exhibiting 0.21 rad and 0.47 rad of integrated phase errors
(over 1 mHz - 1 MHz) respectively. Alternatively, the comb was locked to two
optical references at 698 nm and 1064 nm, obtaining 0.43 rad and 0.14 rad of
integrated phase errors respectively
Ultra-stable long distance optical frequency distribution using the Internet fiber network
We report an optical link of 540 km for ultrastable frequency distribution
over the Internet fiber network. The stable frequency optical signal is
processed enabling uninterrupted propagation on both directions. The robustness
and the performance of the link are enhanced by a cost effective fully
automated optoelectronic station. This device is able to coherently regenerate
the return optical signal with a heterodyne optical phase locking of a low
noise laser diode. Moreover the incoming signal polarization variation are
tracked and processed in order to maintain beat note amplitudes within the
operation range. Stable fibered optical interferometer enables optical
detection of the link round trip phase signal. The phase-noise compensated link
shows a fractional frequency instability in 10 Hz bandwidth of 5x10-15 at one
second measurement time and 2x10-19 at 30 000 s. This work is a significant
step towards a sustainable wide area ultrastable optical frequency distribution
and comparison network
A quantum many-body spin system in an optical lattice clock
Strongly interacting quantum many-body systems arise in many areas of physics, but their
complexity generally precludes exact solutions to their dynamics. We explored a strongly
interacting two-level system formed by the clock states in ^(87)Sr as a laboratory for the study of
quantum many-body effects. Our collective spin measurements reveal signatures of the
development of many-body correlations during the dynamical evolution. We derived a many-body
Hamiltonian that describes the experimental observation of atomic spin coherence decay,
density-dependent frequency shifts, severely distorted lineshapes, and correlated spin noise. These
investigations open the door to further explorations of quantum many-body effects and
entanglement through use of highly coherent and precisely controlled optical lattice clocks
Probing many-body interactions in an optical lattice clock
We present a unifying theoretical framework that describes recently observed many-body effects during the interrogation of an optical lattice clock operated with thousands of fermionic alkaline earth atoms. The framework is based on a many-body master equation that accounts for the interplay between elastic and inelastic p-wave and s-wave interactions, finite temperature effects and excitation inhomogeneity during the quantum dynamics of the interrogated atoms. Solutions of the master equation in different parameter regimes are presented and compared. It is shown that a general solution can be obtained by using the so called Truncated Wigner Approximation which is applied in our case in the context of an open quantum system. We use the developed framework to model the density shift and decay of the fringes observed during Ramsey spectroscopy in the JILA (^87)Sr and NIST (^171)Yb optical lattice clocks. The developed framework opens a suitable path for dealing with a variety of strongly-correlated and driven open-quantum spin systems
Making optical atomic clocks more stable with level laser stabilization
The superb precision of an atomic clock is derived from its stability. Atomic
clocks based on optical (rather than microwave) frequencies are attractive
because of their potential for high stability, which scales with operational
frequency. Nevertheless, optical clocks have not yet realized this vast
potential, due in large part to limitations of the laser used to excite the
atomic resonance. To address this problem, we demonstrate a cavity-stabilized
laser system with a reduced thermal noise floor, exhibiting a fractional
frequency instability of . We use this laser as a stable
optical source in a Yb optical lattice clock to resolve an ultranarrow 1 Hz
transition linewidth. With the stable laser source and the signal to noise
ratio (S/N) afforded by the Yb optical clock, we dramatically reduce key
stability limitations of the clock, and make measurements consistent with a
clock instability of
Resolved atomic interaction sidebands in an optical clock transition
We report the observation of resolved atomic interaction sidebands (ISB) in
the Sr optical clock transition when atoms at microkelvin temperatures
are confined in a two-dimensional (2D) optical lattice. The ISB are a
manifestation of the strong interactions that occur between atoms confined in a
quasi-one-dimensional geometry and disappear when the confinement is relaxed
along one dimension. The emergence of ISB is linked to the recently observed
suppression of collisional frequency shifts in [1]. At the current
temperatures, the ISB can be resolved but are broad. At lower temperatures, ISB
are predicted to be substantially narrower and usable as powerful spectroscopic
tools in strongly interacting alkaline-earth gases
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