41 research outputs found
A noise-immune cavity-assisted non-destructive detection for an optical lattice clock in the quantum regime
We present and implement a non-destructive detection scheme for the
transition probability readout of an optical lattice clock. The scheme relies
on a differential heterodyne measurement of the dispersive properties of
lattice-trapped atoms enhanced by a high finesse cavity. By design, this scheme
offers a 1st order rejection of the technical noise sources, an enhanced
signal-to-noise ratio, and an homogeneous atom-cavity coupling. We
theoretically show that this scheme is optimal with respect to the photon shot
noise limit. We experimentally realize this detection scheme in an operational
strontium optical lattice clock. The resolution is on the order of a few atoms
with a photon scattering rate low enough to keep the atoms trapped after
detection. This scheme opens the door to various different interrogations
protocols, which reduce the frequency instability, including atom recycling,
zero-dead time clocks with a fast repetition rate, and sub quantum projection
noise frequency stability
Photoassociation spectroscopy of a Spin-1 Bose-Einstein condensate
We report on the high resolution photoassociation spectroscopy of a Rb
spin-1 Bose-Einstein condensate to the excited
molecular states. We demonstrate the use of spin dependent photoassociation to
experimentally identify the molecular states and their corresponding initial
scattering channel. These identifications are in excellent agreement with the
eigenvalues of a hyperfine-rotational Hamiltonian. Using the observed spectra
we estimate the change in scattering length and identify photoassociation laser
light frequency ranges that maximize the change in the spin-dependent
mean-field interaction energy.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Generation and detection of a sub-Poissonian atom number distribution in a one-dimensional optical lattice
We demonstrate preparation and detection of an atom number distribution in a
one-dimensional atomic lattice with the variance dB below the Poissonian
noise level. A mesoscopic ensemble containing a few thousand atoms is trapped
in the evanescent field of a nanofiber. The atom number is measured through
dual-color homodyne interferometry with a pW-power shot noise limited probe.
Strong coupling of the evanescent probe guided by the nanofiber allows for a
real-time measurement with a precision of atoms on an ensemble of some
atoms in a one-dimensional trap. The method is very well suited for
generating collective atomic entangled or spin-squeezed states via a quantum
non-demolition measurement as well as for tomography of exotic atomic states in
a one-dimensional lattice
Spin-Nematic Squeezed Vacuum in a Quantum Gas
Using squeezed states it is possible to surpass the standard quantum limit of
measurement uncertainty by reducing the measurement uncertainty of one property
at the expense of another complementary property. Squeezed states were first
demonstrated in optical fields and later with ensembles of pseudo spin-1/2
atoms using non-linear atom-light interactions. Recently, collisional
interactions in ultracold atomic gases have been used to generate a large
degree of quadrature spin squeezing in two-component Bose condensates. For
pseudo spin-1/2 systems, the complementary properties are the different
components of the total spin vector , which fully characterize the state on
an SU(2) Bloch sphere. Here, we measure squeezing in a spin-1 Bose condensate,
an SU(3) system, which requires measurement of the rank-2 nematic or quadrupole
tensor as well to fully characterize the state. Following a quench
through a nematic to ferromagnetic quantum phase transition, squeezing is
observed in the variance of the quadratures up to -8.3(-0.7 +0.6) dB
(-10.3(-0.9 +0.7) dB corrected for detection noise) below the standard quantum
limit. This spin-nematic squeezing is observed for negligible occupation of the
squeezed modes and is analogous to optical two-mode vacuum squeezing. This work
has potential applications to continuous variable quantum information and
quantum-enhanced magnetometry
Towards quantum state tomography of a single polariton state of an atomic ensemble
We present a proposal and a feasibility study for the creation and quantum
state tomography of a single polariton state of an atomic ensemble. The
collective non-classical and non-Gaussian state of the ensemble is generated by
detection of a single forward scattered photon. The state is subsequently
characterized by atomic state tomography performed using strong dispersive
light-atoms interaction followed by a homodyne measurement on the transmitted
light. The proposal is backed by preliminary experimental results showing
projection noise limited sensitivity and a simulation demonstrating the
feasibility of the proposed method for detection of a non-classical and
non-Gaussian state of the mesoscopic atomic ensemble. This work represents the
first attempt of hybrid discrete-continuous variable quantum state processing
with atomic ensembles
A clock network for geodesy and fundamental science
Leveraging the unrivaled performance of optical clocks in applications in
fundamental physics beyond the standard model, in geo-sciences, and in
astronomy requires comparing the frequency of distant optical clocks
truthfully. Meeting this requirement, we report on the first comparison and
agreement of fully independent optical clocks separated by 700 km being only
limited by the uncertainties of the clocks themselves. This is achieved by a
phase-coherent optical frequency transfer via a 1415 km long telecom fiber link
that enables substantially better precision than classical means of frequency
transfer. The fractional precision in comparing the optical clocks of three
parts in was reached after only 1000 s averaging time, which is
already 10 times better and more than four orders of magnitude faster than with
any other existing frequency transfer method. The capability of performing high
resolution international clock comparisons paves the way for a redefinition of
the unit of time and an all-optical dissemination of the SI-second.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl