English

Compact Optical Atomic Clock Based on a Two-Photon Transition in Rubidium

Atomic Physics 2025-09-22 v1

Abstract

Extra-laboratory atomic clocks are necessary for a wide array of applications (e.g. satellite-based navigation and communication). Building upon existing vapor cell and laser technologies, we describe an optical atomic clock, designed around a simple and manufacturable architecture, that utilizes the 778~nm two-photon transition in rubidium and yields fractional frequency instabilities of 3×1013/τ(s)3\times10^{-13}/\sqrt{\tau (s)} for τ\tau from 1~s to 10000~s. We present a complete stability budget for this system and explore the required conditions under which a fractional frequency instability of 1×10151\times 10^{-15} can be maintained on long timescales. We provide precise characterization of the leading sensitivities to external processes including magnetic fields and fluctuations of the vapor cell temperature and 778~nm laser power. The system is constructed primarily from commercially-available components, an attractive feature from the standpoint of commercialization and deployment of optical frequency standards.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1903.11231,
  title  = {Compact Optical Atomic Clock Based on a Two-Photon Transition in Rubidium},
  author = {Kyle W. Martin and Gretchen Phelps and Nathan D. Lemke and Matthew S. Bigelow and Benjamin Stuhl and Michael Wojcik and Michael Holt and Ian Coddington and Michael W. Bishop and Johh H. Burke},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1903.11231},
  year   = {2025}
}

Comments

9 pages, 6 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-23T08:20:21.266Z