English

An atomic array optical clock with single-atom readout

Atomic Physics 2019-12-18 v3 Quantum Gases Quantum Physics

Abstract

Currently, the most accurate and stable clocks use optical interrogation of either a single ion or an ensemble of neutral atoms confined in an optical lattice. Here, we demonstrate a new optical clock system based on an array of individually trapped neutral atoms with single-atom readout, merging many of the benefits of ion and lattice clocks as well as creating a bridge to recently developed techniques in quantum simulation and computing with neutral atoms. We evaluate single-site resolved frequency shifts and short-term stability via self-comparison. Atom-by-atom feedback control enables direct experimental estimation of laser noise contributions. Results agree well with an ab initio Monte Carlo simulation that incorporates finite temperature, projective read-out, laser noise, and feedback dynamics. Our approach, based on a tweezer array, also suppresses interaction shifts while retaining a short dead time, all in a comparatively simple experimental setup suited for transportable operation. These results establish the foundations for a third optical clock platform and provide a novel starting point for entanglement-enhanced metrology, quantum clock networks, and applications in quantum computing and communication with individual neutral atoms that require optical clock state control.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1908.05619,
  title  = {An atomic array optical clock with single-atom readout},
  author = {Ivaylo S. Madjarov and Alexandre Cooper and Adam L. Shaw and Jacob P. Covey and Vladimir Schkolnik and Tai Hyun Yoon and Jason R. Williams and Manuel Endres},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1908.05619},
  year   = {2019}
}

Comments

14 pages, 8 figures, 1 table; accepted in PRX on October 25th, 2019