88 research outputs found

    The Digital Revolution, also for Time Scales

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    This work focuses on the generation of a composite clock for time scales and shows the advantages of a more recent digital approach with respect to a traditional analog one. A digital approach directly processes the information contained into the clock sinusoids, instead of the sinusoids themselves and leads to significant advantages in terms of reliability, performance, complexity, flexibility, size, power consumption and cost. A practical example based on a new digital instrument is provided to show how it is possible to combine state-of-the-art clocks from the Oscillator Imp platform at FEMTO-ST and FEMTO Engineering (Besan\c{c}on, France).Comment: Proceeding of the IFCS-EFTF 2023, held in Toyam

    Avoiding Aliasing in Allan Variance: an Application to Fiber Link Data Analysis

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    Optical fiber links are known as the most performing tools to transfer ultrastable frequency reference signals. However, these signals are affected by phase noise up to bandwidths of several kilohertz and a careful data processing strategy is required to properly estimate the uncertainty. This aspect is often overlooked and a number of approaches have been proposed to implicitly deal with it. Here, we face this issue in terms of aliasing and show how typical tools of signal analysis can be adapted to the evaluation of optical fiber links performance. In this way, it is possible to use the Allan variance as estimator of stability and there is no need to introduce other estimators. The general rules we derive can be extended to all optical links. As an example, we apply this method to the experimental data we obtained on a 1284 km coherent optical link for frequency dissemination, which we realized in Italy

    A scalable hardware and software control apparatus for experiments with hybrid quantum systems

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    Modern experiments with fundamental quantum systems - like ultracold atoms, trapped ions, single photons - are managed by a control system formed by a number of input/output electronic channels governed by a computer. In hybrid quantum systems, where two or more quantum systems are combined and made to interact, establishing an efficient control system is particularly challenging due to the higher complexity, especially when each single quantum system is characterized by a different timescale. Here we present a new control apparatus specifically designed to efficiently manage hybrid quantum systems. The apparatus is formed by a network of fast communicating Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs), the action of which is administrated by a software. Both hardware and software share the same tree-like structure, which ensures a full scalability of the control apparatus. In the hardware, a master board acts on a number of slave boards, each of which is equipped with an FPGA that locally drives analog and digital input/output channels and radiofrequency (RF) outputs up to 400 MHz. The software is designed to be a general platform for managing both commercial and home-made instruments in a user-friendly and intuitive Graphical User Interface (GUI). The architecture ensures that complex control protocols can be carried out, such as performing of concurrent commands loops by acting on different channels, the generation of multi-variable error functions and the implementation of self-optimization procedures. Although designed for managing experiments with hybrid quantum systems, in particular with atom-ion mixtures, this control apparatus can in principle be used in any experiment in atomic, molecular, and optical physics.Comment: 10 pages, 12 figure

    Phase noise and jitter in digital electronics

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    Reducing cavity-pulling shift in Ramsey-operated compact clocks

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    We describe a method to stabilize the amplitude of the interrogating microwave field in compact atomic clocks working in a Ramsey approach. In this technique, we take advantage of the pulsed regime to use the atoms themselves as microwave amplitude discriminators. Specifically, in addition to the dependence on the microwave detuning, the atomic signal after the Ramsey interrogation acquires a dependence on the microwave pulse area (amplitude times duration) that can be exploited to implement an active stabilization of the microwave field amplitude, in a similar way in which the Ramsey clock signal is used to lock the local oscillator frequency to the atomic reference. This stabilization results in a reduced sensitivity of the clock frequency to microwave amplitude fluctuations that are transferred to the atoms through the cavity-pulling effect. The proposed technique is then effective to improve the clock stability and drift on medium and long term. We demonstrate the method for a vapor-cell clock working with a hot sample of atoms but it can be extended to cold-atom compact clocks.Comment: Accepted for publication by IEEE UFFC on April 16th 201

    Phase Noise and Frequency Stability of the Red-Pitaya Internal PLL

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    partially_open5sìIn field-programmable gate array platforms, the main clock is generally a low-cost quartz oscillator whose stability is of the order of 10-9 to 10-10 in the short term and 10-7 to 10-8 in the medium term, with the uncertainty of tens of ppm. Better stability is achieved by feeding an external reference into the internal phase-locked loop (PLL). We report the noise characterization of the internal PLL of Red-Pitaya platform, an open-source embedded system architected around the Zynq 7010 System on Chip, with analog-to-digital and digital-to-analog converters. Our experiments show that, providing an external 10-MHz reference, the PLL exhibits a residual frequency stability of 1.2×10-12 at 1 s and 1.3×10-15 at 4000 s, Allan deviation in 5-Hz bandwidth. These results help to predict the PLL stability as a function of frequency and power of the external reference, and provide guidelines for the design of precision instrumentation, chiefly intended for time and frequency metrology.partially_openCardenas Olaya, Andrea Carolina; Calosso, Claudio Eligio; Friedt, Jean-Michel; Micalizio, Salvatore; Rubiola, EnricoCardenas Olaya, Andrea Carolina; Calosso, Claudio Eligio; Friedt, Jean-Michel; Micalizio, Salvatore; Rubiola, Enric

    Frequency transfer via a two-way optical phase comparison on a multiplexed fiber network

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    We performed a two-way remote optical phase comparison on optical fiber. Two optical frequency signals were launched in opposite directions in an optical fiber and their phases were simultaneously measured at the other end. In this technique, the fiber noise was passively cancelled, and we compared two optical frequencies at the ultimate 1E-21 stability level. The experiment was performed on a 47 km fiber that is part of the metropolitan network for Internet traffic. The technique relies on the synchronous measurement of the optical phases at the two ends of the link, that is made possible by the use of digital electronics. This scheme offers several advantages with respect to active noise cancellation, and can be upgraded to perform more complex tasks

    Frequency Stability Measurement of Cryogenic Sapphire Oscillators with a Multichannel Tracking DDS and the Two-Sample Covariance

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    open6sìThis article shows the first measurement of three 100 MHz signals exhibiting fluctuations from 2×10-16 to parts in 10-15 for integration time τ between 1 s and 1 day. Such stable signals are provided by three Cryogenic Sapphire Oscillators (CSOs) operating at about 10 GHz, also delivering the 100 MHz output via a dedicated synthesizer. The measurement is made possible by a 6-channel Tracking DDS (TDDS) and the two-sample covariance tool, used to estimate the Allan variance. The use of two TDDS channels per CSO enables high rejection of the instrument background noise. The covariance outperforms the Three-Cornered Hat (TCH) method in that the background converges to zero "out of the box", with no need of the hypothesis that the instrument channels are equally noisy, nor of more sophisticated techniques to estimate the background noise of each channel. Thanks to correlation and averaging, the instrument background (AVAR) rolls off with a slope 1/√m, the number of measurements, down to 10-18 at τ=104 s. For consistency check, we compare the results to the traditional TCH method beating the 10 GHz outputs down to the MHz region. Given the flexibility of the TDDS, our methods find immediate application to the measurement of the 250 MHz output of the FS combs.openCalosso, Claudio E; Vernotte, Francois; Giordano, Vincent; Fluhr, Christophe; Dubois, Benoit; Rubiola, EnricoCalosso, Claudio E; Vernotte, Francois; Giordano, Vincent; Fluhr, Christophe; Dubois, Benoit; Rubiola, Enric

    Loaded microwave cavity for compact vapor-cell clocks

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    Vapor-cell devices based on microwave interrogation provide a stable frequency reference with a compact and robust setup. Further miniaturization must focus on optimizing the physics package, containing the microwave cavity and atomic reservoir. In this paper we present a compact cavity-cell assembly based on a dielectric-loaded cylindrical resonator. The structure accommodates a clock cell with 0.9 cm30.9 \, \mathrm{cm^3} inner volume and has an outer volume of only 35 cm335 \, \mathrm{cm^3}. The proposed design aims at strongly reducing the core of the atomic clock, maintaining at the same time high-performing short-term stability (σy(τ)≤5×10−13 τ−1/2\sigma_y(\tau) \leq 5\times 10^{-13} \,\tau^{-1/2} standard Allan deviation). The proposed structure is characterized in terms of magnetic field uniformity and atom-field coupling with the aid of finite-elements calculations. The thermal sensitivity is also analyzed and experimentally characterized. We present preliminary spectroscopy results by integrating the compact cavity within a rubidium clock setup based on the pulsed optically pumping technique. The obtained clock signals are compatible with the targeted performances. The loaded-cavity approach is thus a viable design option for miniaturized microwave clocks.Comment: Submitted to IEEE-UFF
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