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A chip-scale atomic beam clock

Atomic Physics 2025-12-09 v1

Abstract

Atomic beams are a longstanding technology for atom-based sensors and clocks with widespread use in commercial frequency standards. Here, we report the demonstration a chip-scale microwave atomic beam clock using coherent population trapping (CPT) interrogation in a passively pumped atomic beam device. The beam device consists of a hermetically sealed vacuum cell fabricated from an anodically bonded stack of glass and Si wafers. Atomic beams are created using a lithographically defined microcapillary array connected to a Rb reservoir1 and propagate in a 15 mm long drift cavity. We present a detailed characterization of the atomic beam performance (total Rb flux 7.7×1011s1\approx 7.7 \times 10^{11} s^{-1} at 363 K device temperature) and of the vacuum environment in the device (pressure < 1 Pa), which is sustained using getter materials which pump residual gases and Rb vapor. A chip-scale beam clock is realized using Ramsey CPT spectroscopy of the 87Rb ground state hyperfine transition over a 10 mm Ramsey distance in the atomic beam device. The prototype atomic beam clock demonstrates a fractional frequency stability of 1.2×109/τ\approx 1.2 \times 10^{-9}/\sqrt{\tau} for integration times τ\tau from 1 s to 250 s, limited by detection noise. Optimized atomic beam clocks based on this approach may exceed the long-term stability of existing chip-scale clocks, and leading long-term systematics are predicted to limit the ultimate fractional frequency stability below 101210^{-12}.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2303.11458,
  title  = {A chip-scale atomic beam clock},
  author = {Gabriela D. Martinez and Chao Li and Alexander Staron and John Kitching and Chandra Raman and William R. McGehee},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2303.11458},
  year   = {2025}
}

Comments

22 pages, 4 figures