1,014 research outputs found
Rubidium gas cell studies
The stability of Rb-87 optically pumped masers and Rb gas cells is examined. Descriptions are given of the technical procedures used in construction and the changes made to solve the problems encountered in the electronics of the systems
Analysis of a Magnetically Trapped Atom Clock
We consider optimization of a rubidium atom clock that uses magnetically
trapped Bose condensed atoms in a highly elongated trap, and determine the
optimal conditions for minimum Allan variance of the clock using microwave
Ramsey fringe spectroscopy. Elimination of magnetic field shifts and
collisional shifts are considered. The effects of spin-dipolar relaxation are
addressed in the optimization of the clock. We find that for the interstate
interaction strength equal to or larger than the intrastate interaction
strengths, a modulational instability results in phase separation and symmetry
breaking of the two-component condensate composed of the ground and excited
hyperfine clock levels, and this mechanism limits the clock accuracy.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
An effective quasi-one-dimensional description of a spin-1 atomic condensate
Within the mean field theory we extend the effective quasi-1D non-polynomial
Schr\"{o}dinger equation (NPSE) approach to the description of a spin-1 atomic
condensate in a tight radial confinement geometry for both weak and strong
atom-atom interactions. Detailed comparisons with full time dependent 3D
numerical simulations show excellent agreement as in the case of a single
component scalar condensate, demonstrating our result as an efficient and
effective tool for the understanding of spin-1 condensate dynamics observed in
several recent experiments.Comment: 5 pages, 3 eps figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. A. Small typoes
corrections. Updated Reference
Influence of modulation frequency in rubidium cell frequency standards
The error signal which is used to control the frequency of the quartz crystal oscillator of a passive rubidium cell frequency standard is considered. The value of the slope of this signal, for an interrogation frequency close to the atomic transition frequency is calculated and measured for various phase (or frequency) modulation waveforms, and for several values of the modulation frequency. A theoretical analysis is made using a model which applies to a system in which the optical pumping rate, the relaxation rates and the RF field are homogeneous. Results are given for sine-wave phase modulation, square-wave frequency modulation and square-wave phase modulation. The influence of the modulation frequency on the slope of the error signal is specified. It is shown that the modulation frequency can be chosen as large as twice the non-saturated full-width at half-maximum without a drastic loss of the sensitivity to an offset of the interrogation frequency from center line, provided that the power saturation factor and the amplitude of modulation are properly adjusted
Rubidium 87 gas cell studies, phase 2
The design, development, and characteristics of a rubidium 87 maser are discussed. The design of a receiver capable of locking a crystal oscillator to the maser signal is reported. The subjects considered are: (1) maser construction, (2) maser control electronics, (3) the characteristics of the receiver, and (4) results of experimental maser tests
Hydrogen maser development at Laval University
The physical construction of two hydrogen masers is described and results of measurements made on one of the masers are given. These include: cavity Q, thermal time constant, line Q, signal power output, magnetic shielding factor. Preliminary results indicate that the frequency stability will be mainly affected by the thermal of the cavity. The magnetic field and the barometric fluctuations should not affect the maser at the stability level above a few parts in 10 to the 15th power, which is the goal for averaging times of several hours
Hydrogen maser as a highly stable frequency reference
Hydrogen maser is stable short-term and long-term frequency reference for precision tracking systems. Its resettability is expressed as the rms deviation from the mean
Cold Atom Clock Test of Lorentz Invariance in the Matter Sector
We report on a new experiment that tests for a violation of Lorentz
invariance (LI), by searching for a dependence of atomic transition frequencies
on the orientation of the spin of the involved states (Hughes-Drever type
experiment). The atomic frequencies are measured using a laser cooled
Cs atomic fountain clock, operating on a particular combination of
Zeeman substates. We analyze the results within the framework of the Lorentz
violating standard model extension (SME), where our experiment is sensitive to
a largely unexplored region of the SME parameter space, corresponding to first
measurements of four proton parameters and improvements by 11 and 13 orders of
magnitude on the determination of four others. In spite of the attained
uncertainties, and of having extended the search into a new region of the SME,
we still find no indication of LI violation.Comment: 4 pages, accepted for Physical Review Letter
Coherent spin mixing dynamics in a spin-1 atomic condensate
We study the coherent off-equilibrium spin mixing inside an atomic
condensate. Using mean field theory and adopting the single spatial mode
approximation (SMA), the condensate spin dynamics is found to be well described
by that of a nonrigid pendulum, and displays a variety of periodic oscillations
in an external magnetic field. Our results illuminate several recent
experimental observations and provide critical insights into the observation of
coherent interaction-driven oscillations in a spin-1 condensate.Comment: 6 pages, 5 eps figures, update the discussion of the experimental
result
Combined quantum state preparation and laser cooling of a continuous beam of cold atoms
We use two-laser optical pumping on a continuous atomic fountain in order to
prepare cold cesium atoms in the same quantum ground state. A first laser
excites the F=4 ground state to pump the atoms toward F=3 while a second
pi-polarized laser excites the F=3 -> F'=3 transition of the D2 line to produce
Zeeman pumping toward m=0. To avoid trap states, we implement the first laser
in a 2D optical lattice geometry, thereby creating polarization gradients. This
configuration has the advantage of simultaneously producing Sisyphus cooling
when the optical lattice laser is tuned between the F=4 -> F'=4 and F=4 -> F'=5
transitions of the D2 line, which is important to remove the heat produced by
optical pumping. Detuning the frequency of the second pi-polarized laser
reveals the action of a new mechanism improving both laser cooling and state
preparation efficiency. A physical interpretation of this mechanism is
discussed.Comment: Minor changes according to the recommendations of the referee: -
Corrected Fig.1. - Split the graph of Fig.6 for clarity. - Added one
reference. - Added two remarks in the conclusion. - Results unchange
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