17 research outputs found
Sympathetic Cooling of Trapped Cd+ Isotopes
We sympathetically cool a trapped 112Cd+ ion by directly Doppler-cooling a
114Cd+ ion in the same trap. This is the first demonstration of optically
addressing a single trapped ion being sympathetically cooled by a different
species ion. Notably, the experiment uses a single laser source, and does not
require strong focusing. This paves the way toward reducing decoherence in an
ion trap quantum computer based on Cd+ isotopes.Comment: 4 figure
Quantum computation with two-level trapped cold ions beyond Lamb-Dicke limit
We propose a simple scheme for implementing quantum logic gates with a string
of two-level trapped cold ions outside the Lamb-Dicke limit. Two internal
states of each ion are used as one computational qubit (CQ) and the collective
vibration of ions acts as the information bus, i.e., bus qubit (BQ). Using the
quantum dynamics for the laser-ion interaction as described by a generalized
Jaynes-Cummings model, we show that quantum entanglement between any one CQ and
the BQ can be coherently manipulated by applying classical laser beams. As a
result, universal quantum gates, i.e. the one-qubit rotation and two-qubit
controlled gates, can be implemented exactly. The required experimental
parameters for the implementation, including the Lamb-Dicke (LD) parameter and
the durations of the applied laser pulses, are derived. Neither the LD
approximation for the laser-ion interaction nor the auxiliary atomic level is
needed in the present scheme.Comment: 12 pages, no figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Power dependence of the frequency bias caused by spurious components in the microwave spectrum in atomic fountains
The presence of spurious spectral components in the microwave excitation may induce frequency shifts in an atomic fountain frequency standard. We discuss how such shifts behave as a function of power variations of the excitation carrier and in the spur-to-carrier ratio. The discussion here is limited to the case of single-sideband spurs, which are generally much more troublesome due to their ability to cause frequency shifts. We find an extremely rich and unintuitive behavior of these frequency shifts. We also discuss how pulsed operation, typical of today's fountain frequency standards, relates to frequency shifts caused by spurs in the microwave spectrum. The conclusion of these investigations is that it is, at best, difficult to use elevated power microwaves in fountain frequency standards to test for the presence of spurs in the microwave spectru
First accuracy evaluation of NIST-F2
We report the first accuracy evaluation of NIST-F2, a second-generation laser-cooled caesium
fountain primary standard developed at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
with a cryogenic (liquid nitrogen) microwave cavity and flight region. The 80 K atom interrogation
environment reduces the uncertainty due to the blackbody radiation shift by more than a factor of
50. Also, the Ramsey microwave cavity exhibits a high quality factor (>50 000) at this low
temperature, resulting in a reduced distributed cavity phase shift. NIST-F2 has undergone many
tests and improvements since we first began operation in 2008. In the last few years NIST-F2 has
been compared against a NIST maser time scale and NIST-F1 (the US primary frequency standard)
as part of in-house accuracy evaluations. We report the results of nine in-house comparisons since
2010 with a focus on the most recent accuracy evaluation. This paper discusses the design of the
physics package, the laser and optics systems and the accuracy evaluation methods. The type B
fractional uncertainty of NIST-F2 is shown to be 0.11×10^−15
and is dominated by microwave
amplitude dependent effects. The most recent evaluation (August 2013) had a statistical (type A)
fractional uncertainty of 0.44×10^−15