High-stability compact atomic clock based on isotropic laser cooling
Abstract
We present a compact cold-atom clock configuration where isotropic laser cooling, microwave interrogation, and clock signal detection are successively performed inside a spherical microwave cavity. For ground operation, a typical Ramsey fringe width of 20 Hz has been demonstrated, limited by the atom cloud’s free fall in the cavity. The isotropic cooling light’s disordered properties provide a large and stable number of cold atoms, leading to a high signal-to-noise ratio limited by atomic shot noise. A relative frequency stability of 2.2×10-13τ-1/2 has been achieved, averaged down to 4×10-15 after 5×103 s of integration. Development of such a high-performance compact clock is of major relevance for on-board applications, such as satellite-positioning systems. As a cesium clock, it opens the door to a new generation of compact primary standards and timekeeping devices.
- Publication:
-
Physical Review A
- Pub Date:
- September 2010
- DOI:
- 10.1103/PhysRevA.82.033436
- Bibcode:
- 2010PhRvA..82c3436E
- Keywords:
-
- 37.10.De;
- 42.50.Ct;
- 42.62.Fi;
- 06.20.-f;
- Atom cooling methods;
- Quantum description of interaction of light and matter;
- related experiments;
- Laser spectroscopy;
- Metrology