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Quantum Enhanced Cavity QED Interferometer with Partially Delocalized Atoms in Lattices

ORAL

Abstract

We propose a quantum enhanced interferometric protocol for gravimetry and force sensing using cold atoms in an optical lattice supported by a standing-wave cavity. By loading the atoms in partially delocalized Wannier-Stark states, it is possible to cancel the undesirable inhomogeneities arising from the mismatch between the lattice and cavity fields and to generate spin squeezed states via a uniform one-axis twisting model. The quantum enhanced sensitivity of the states combined with subsequent implementation of a compound pulse sequence, that allows to separate atoms by several lattice sites, together with the capability to load small atomic clouds in the lattice at micrometric distances from a surface, make our setup ideal for sensing short-range forces. We show that for arrays of 104 atoms, our protocol can reduce the required averaging time by a factor of 10 compared to current lattice-based interferometers after accounting for major sources of decoherence.

Presenters

  • Anjun Chu

    JILA, NIST and Dept. of Physics, University of Colorado Boulder

Authors

  • Anjun Chu

    JILA, NIST and Dept. of Physics, University of Colorado Boulder

  • Peiru He

    JILA, University of Colorado Boulder, JILA, NIST and Dept. of Physics, University of Colorado Boulder

  • James Thompson

    University of Colorado, Boulder / NIST, JILA, University of Colorado, Boulder, JILA, NIST and Dept. of Physics, University of Colorado Boulder

  • Ana Maria Rey

    University of Colorado, Boulder, JILA, JILA, NIST, CU Boulder, JILA, University of Colorado Boulder, JILA, NIST and Dept. of Physics, University of Colorado Boulder, JILA, NIST, Univ. of Colorado Boulder