Nuclear Spin Effects in Optical Lattice Clocks
Abstract
We present a detailed experimental and theoretical study of the effect of nuclear spin on the performance of optical lattice clocks. With a state-mixing theory including spin-orbit and hyperfine interactions, we describe the origin of the - clock transition and the differential g-factor between the two clock states for alkaline-earth(-like) atoms, using Sr as an example. Clock frequency shifts due to magnetic and optical fields are discussed with an emphasis on those relating to nuclear structure. An experimental determination of the differential g-factor in Sr is performed and is in good agreement with theory. The magnitude of the tensor light shift on the clock states is also explored experimentally. State specific measurements with controlled nuclear spin polarization are discussed as a method to reduce the nuclear spin-related systematic effects to below 10 in lattice clocks.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0704.0912,
title = {Nuclear Spin Effects in Optical Lattice Clocks},
author = {Martin M. Boyd and Tanya Zelevinsky and Andrew D. Ludlow and Sebastian Blatt and Thomas Zanon-Willette and Seth M. Foreman and Jun Ye},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0704.0912},
year = {2009}
}
Comments
13 pages, 12 figures, submitted to PRA