196 research outputs found
Stroboscopic back-action evasion in a dense alkali-metal vapor
We explore experimentally quantum non-demolition (QND) measurements of atomic
spin in a hot potassium vapor in the presence of spin-exchange relaxation. We
demonstrate a new technique for back-action evasion by stroboscopic modulation
of the probe light. With this technique we study spin noise as a function of
polarization for atoms with spin greater than 1/2 and obtain good agreement
with a simple theoretical model. We point that in a system with fast
spin-exchange, where the spin relaxation rate is changing with time, it is
possible to improve the long-term sensitivity of atomic magnetometry by using
QND measurements
High Bandwidth Atomic Magnetometery with Continuous Quantum Non-demolition Measurements
We describe an experimental study of spin-projection noise in a high
sensitivity alkali-metal magnetometer. We demonstrate a four-fold improvement
in the measurement bandwidth of the magnetometer using continuous quantum
non-demolition (QND) measurements. Operating in the scalar mode with a
measurement volume of 2 cm^3 we achieve magnetic field sensitivity of 22
fT/Hz^(1/2) and a bandwidth of 1.9 kHz with a spin polarization of only 1%. Our
experimental arrangement is naturally back-action evading and can be used to
realize sub-fT sensitivity with a highly polarized spin-squeezed atomic vapor.Comment: 4 page
Limits on new long range nuclear spin-dependent forces set with a K-3He co-magnetometer
A magnetometer using spin-polarized K and He atoms occupying the same
volume is used to search for anomalous nuclear spin-dependent forces generated
by a separate He spin source. We measure changes in the He spin
precession frequency with a resolution of 18 pHz and constrain anomalous spin
forces between neutrons to be less than of their magnetic or
less than of their gravitational interactions on a length
scale of 50 cm. We present new limits on neutron coupling to light pseudoscalar
and vector particles, including torsion, and constraints on recently proposed
models involving unparticles and spontaneous breaking of Lorentz symmetry.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, latest version as appeared in PR
A Low-Noise High-Density Alkali Metal Scalar Magnetometer
We present an experimental and theoretical study of a scalar atomic
magnetometer using an oscillating field-driven Zeeman resonance in a
high-density optically-pumped potassium vapor. We describe an experimental
implementation of an atomic gradiometer with a noise level below 10
fT/Hz^{1/2}, fractional field sensitivity below 10^{-9}/Hz^{1/2}, and an active
measurement volume of about 1.5 cm^3. We show that the fundamental field
sensitivity of a scalar magnetometer is determined by the rate of alkali-metal
spin-exchange collisions even though the resonance linewidth can be made much
smaller than the spin-exchange rate by pumping most atoms into a stretched spin
state.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures. Version 2 is longer, with more complete
description of theoretical analysis and comparison between analytical and
experimental result
Non-invasive detection of animal nerve impulses with an atomic magnetometer operating near quantum limited sensitivity
Magnetic fields generated by human and animal organs, such as the heart,
brain and nervous system carry information useful for biological and medical
purposes. These magnetic fields are most commonly detected using
cryogenically-cooled superconducting magnetometers. Here we present the frst
detection of action potentials from an animal nerve using an optical atomic
magnetometer. Using an optimal design we are able to achieve the sensitivity
dominated by the quantum shot noise of light and quantum projection noise of
atomic spins. Such sensitivity allows us to measure the nerve impulse with a
miniature room-temperature sensor which is a critical advantage for biomedical
applications. Positioning the sensor at a distance of a few millimeters from
the nerve, corresponding to the distance between the skin and nerves in
biological studies, we detect the magnetic field generated by an action
potential of a frog sciatic nerve. From the magnetic field measurements we
determine the activity of the nerve and the temporal shape of the nerve
impulse. This work opens new ways towards implementing optical magnetometers as
practical devices for medical diagnostics.Comment: Main text with figures, and methods and supplementary informatio
Isotopic variation of parity violation in atomic ytterbium
We report on measurements of atomic parity violation, made on a chain of
ytterbium isotopes with mass numbers A=170, 172, 174, and 176. In the
experiment, we optically excite the 6s2 1S0 -> 5d6s 3D1 transition in a region
of crossed electric and magnetic fields, and observe the interference between
the Stark- and weak-interaction-induced transition amplitudes, by making field
reversals that change the handedness of the coordinate system. This allows us
to determine the ratio of the weak-interaction-induced electric-dipole (E1)
transition moment and the Stark-induced E1 moment. Our measurements, which are
at the 0.5% level of accuracy for three of the four isotopes measured, allow a
definitive observation of the isotopic variation of the weak-interaction
effects in an atom, which is found to be consistent with the prediction of the
Standard Model. In addition, our measurements provide information about an
additional Z' boson.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figures, 2 table
Towards rotation sensing with a single atomic clock
We discuss a scheme to implement a gyroscopic atom sensor with magnetically trapped ultra-cold atoms. Unlike standard light or matter wave Sagnac interferometers no free wave propagation is used. Interferometer operation is controlled only with static, radio-frequency and microwave magnetic fields, which removes the need for interferometric stability of optical laser beams. Due to the confinement of atoms, the scheme may allow the construction of small scale portable sensors. We discuss the main elements of the scheme and report on recent results and efforts towards its experimental realization
Non-extremal Black Hole Microstates: Fuzzballs of Fire or Fuzzballs of Fuzz ?
We construct the first family of microstate geometries of near-extremal black
holes, by placing metastable supertubes inside certain scaling supersymmetric
smooth microstate geometries. These fuzzballs differ from the classical black
hole solution macroscopically at the horizon scale, and for certain probes the
fluctuations between various fuzzballs will be visible as thermal noise far
away from the horizon. We discuss whether these fuzzballs appear to infalling
observers as fuzzballs of fuzz or as fuzzballs of fire. The existence of these
solutions suggests that the singularity of non-extremal black holes is resolved
all the way to the outer horizon and this "backwards in time" singularity
resolution can shed light on the resolution of spacelike cosmological
singularities.Comment: 34 pages, 10 figure
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