171 research outputs found
Efficient sympathetic motional ground-state cooling of a molecular ion
Cold molecular ions are promising candidates in various fields ranging from
precision spectroscopy and test of fundamental physics to ultra-cold chemistry.
Control of internal and external degrees of freedom is a prerequisite for many
of these applications. Motional ground state cooling represents the starting
point for quantum logic-assisted internal state preparation, detection, and
spectroscopy protocols. Robust and fast cooling is crucial to maximize the
fraction of time available for the actual experiment. We optimize the cooling
rate of ground state cooling schemes for single ions and
sympathetic ground state cooling of . In particular, we
show that robust cooling is achieved by combining pulsed Raman sideband cooling
with continuous quench cooling. Furthermore, we experimentally demonstrate an
efficient strategy for ground state cooling outside the Lamb-Dicke regime.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figure
Quantum sensing of oscillating electric fields with trapped ions
Quantum noise is a fundamental limitation for quantum sensors and results in the so-called shot-noise limit. Nowadays, several systems such as optical clocks or gravitational wave detectors approach measurement sensitivities where this limitation poses a major contribution to the total statistical uncertainty. It is known that this limit can be overcome by preparing the probe in a non-classical state. We will give an overview over the different non-classical states that have been implemented in the motion of single trapped ions and discuss their individual advantages and limitations in metrology. Possible applications for the presented experiments are the measurement of small oscillating electric fields and trapping frequencies. The Focus will be on our experimental work on Fock states, where quantum-enhanced sensing in both scenarios is possible with the same quantum state
Quantum Algorithmic Readout in Multi-Ion Clocks
Optical clocks based on ensembles of trapped ions offer the perspective of
record frequency uncertainty with good short-term stability. Most suitable
atomic species lack closed transitions for fast detection such that the clock
signal has to be read out indirectly through transferring the quantum state of
clock ions to co-trapped logic ions by means of quantum logic operations. For
ensembles of clock ions existing methods for quantum logic readout require a
linear overhead in either time or the number of logic ions. Here we report a
quantum algorithmic readout whose overhead scales logarithmically with the
number of clock ions in both of these respects. We show that the readout
algorithm can be implemented with a single application of a multi-species
quantum gate, which we describe in detail for a crystal of Aluminum and Calcium
ions.Comment: 4 pages + 7 pages appendix; 5 figures; v3: published versio
Detection of motional ground state population of a trapped ion using delayed pulses
Efficient preparation and detection of the motional state of trapped ions is
important in many experiments ranging from quantum computation to precision
spectroscopy. We investigate the stimulated Raman adiabatic passage (STIRAP)
technique for the manipulation of motional states in a trapped ion system. The
presented technique uses a Raman coupling between two hyperfine ground states
in Mg, implemented with delayed pulses, which removes a single
phonon independent of the initial motional state. We show that for a thermal
state the STIRAP population transfer is more efficient than a stimulated Raman
Rabi pulse on a motional sideband. In contrast to previous implementations, a
large detuning of more than 200 times the natural linewidth of the transition
is used. This approach renders STIRAP suitable for atoms in which resonant
laser fields would populate fluorescing excited states and thus impede the
STIRAP process. We use the technique to measure the wavefunction overlap of
excited motional states with the motional ground state. This is an important
application for photon recoil spectroscopy and other force sensing applications
that utilize the high sensitivity of the motional state of trapped ions to
external fields. Furthermore, a determination of the ground state population
enables a simple measurement of the ion's temperature.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figure
Precision isotope shift measurements in Ca using highly sensitive detection schemes
We demonstrate an efficient high-precision optical spectroscopy technique for
single trapped ions with non-closed transitions. In a double-shelving
technique, the absorption of a single photon is first amplified to several
phonons of a normal motional mode shared with a co-trapped cooling ion of a
different species, before being further amplified to thousands of fluorescence
photons emitted by the cooling ion using the standard electron shelving
technique. We employ this extension of the photon recoil spectroscopy technique
to perform the first high precision absolute frequency measurement of the
D P transition in Ca,
resulting in a transition frequency of kHz.
Furthermore, we determine the isotope shift of this transition and the
S P transition for Ca,
Ca and Ca ions relative to Ca with an
accuracy below 100 kHz. Improved field and mass shift constants of these
transitions as well as changes in mean square nuclear charge radii are
extracted from this high resolution data
Photon Recoil Spectroscopy: Systematic Shifts and Nonclassical Enhancements
In photon recoil spectroscopy, signals are extracted from recoils imparted by
the spectroscopy light on the motion of trapped ions as demonstrated by C.
Hempel et al., Nature Photonics 7, 630 (2013) and Y. Wan et al., Nature
Communications 5, 3096 (2014). The method exploits the exquisite efficiency in
the detection of phonons achievable in ion crystals, and is thus particularly
suitable for species with broad non-cycling transitions where detection of
fluorescence photons is impractical. Here, we develop a theoretical model for
the description of photon recoil spectroscopy based on a Fokker-Planck equation
for the Wigner function of the phonon mode. Our model correctly explains
systematic shifts due to Doppler heating and cooling as observed in the
experiment. Furthermore, we investigate quantum metrological schemes for
enhancing the spectroscopic sensitivity based on the preparation and detection
of nonclassical states of the phonon mode.Comment: 11+8 pages, 5+2 figures, submitted versio
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