6 research outputs found

    Three-Axis Measurement and Cancellation of Background Magnetic Fields to less than 50 uG in a Cold Atom Experiment

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    Many experiments involving cold and ultracold atomic gases require very precise control of magnetic fields that couple to and drive the atomic spins. Examples include quantum control of atomic spins, quantum control and quantum simulation in optical lattices, and studies of spinor Bose condensates. This makes accurate cancellation of the (generally time dependent) background magnetic field a critical factor in such experiments. We describe a technique that uses the atomic spins themselves to measure DC and AC components of the background field independently along three orthogonal axes, with a resolution of a few tens of uG in a bandwidth of ~1 kHz. Once measured, the background field can be cancelled with three pairs of compensating coils driven by arbitrary waveform generators. In our laboratory, the magnetic field environment is sufficiently stable for the procedure to reduce the field along each axis to less than ~50 uG rms, corresponding to a suppression of the AC part by about one order of magnitude. This suggests our approach can provide access to a new low-field regime in cold-atom experiments.Comment: 7 pages, 8 Figure

    A Continuous Non-demolition Measurement of the Cs Clock Transition Pseudo-spin

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    We demonstrate a weak continuous measurement of the pseudo-spin associated with the clock transition in a sample of Cs atoms. Our scheme uses an optical probe tuned near the D1 transition to measure the sample birefringence, which depends on the z-component of the collective pseudospin. At certain probe frequencies the differential light shift of the clock states vanishes and the measurement is non-perturbing. In dense samples the measurement can be used to squeeze the collective clock pseudo-spin, and has potential to improve the performance of atomic clocks and interferometers.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, ReVTeX, modified text in response to referee's comment

    Quantum Control of the Hyperfine Spin of a Cs Atom Ensemble

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    We demonstrate quantum control of a large spin-angular momentum associated with the F=3 hyperfine ground state of 133Cs. A combination of time dependent magnetic fields and a static tensor light shift is used to implement near-optimal controls and map a fiducial state to a broad range of target states, with yields in the range 0.8-0.9. Squeezed states are produced also by an adiabatic scheme that is more robust against errors. Universal control facilitates the encoding and manipulation of qubits and qudits in atomic ground states, and may lead to improvement of some precision measurements.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures (color
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