A background-free optically levitated charge sensor
ORAL
Abstract
Optically levitated macroscopic objects are a powerful tool in the field of force sensing, owing to high sensitivity, absolute force calibration, environmental isolation, and the advanced degree of control over their dynamics that have been achieved. However, limitations arise from the spurious forces caused by electrical polarization effects that, even for nominally neutral objects, affect the force sensing because of the interaction of dipole moments with gradients of external electric fields. In this talk, I will present a new technique to model and eliminate dipole moment interactions limiting the performance of sensors employing levitated objects. This process leads to the first noise-limited measurement of charges with unprecedented sensitivity. As a specific example, we apply the technique to test the observation that the proton charge is equal in magnitude to that of the electron.
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Presenters
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Nadav Priel
Stanford university
Authors
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Nadav Priel
Stanford university
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Alexander Fieguth
Stanford University
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Emmett Hough
Stanford University
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Charles P Blakemore
Stanford University
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Akio Kawasaki
National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Techno, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
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Denzal Martin
Stanford university, Stanford
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Gautam Venugopalan
Caltech, Stanford university
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Giorgio Gratta
Stanford University, Stanford Univ