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Towards narrow-linewidth, superradiant lasing from a hot atomic beam in <sup>40</sup>Ca

POSTER

Abstract

Frequency-stabilized lasers serve as the cornerstone of many atomic physics experiments. Stabilization is commonly achieved by electronically locking the laser frequency to a reference cavity. Cavity length fluctuations, resulting from thermal and mechanical noise, limit the laser linewidth, requiring complex cavity-stabilization systems to reach <1 Hz linewidths. Recent proposals have theorized narrow-linewidth lasers operating in the superradiant (‘bad-cavity’) regime based on a simple, thermal atomic beam in which the detrimental effects of cavity length fluctuations are highly suppressed [1]. In this poster, we present the required cooling schemes, atomic beam oven, and cavity needed to achieve narrow-linewidth, superradiant lasing in 40Ca. In addition, we discuss the stability of our in-house laser system that notably features a wavemeter as the main frequency reference and includes the cooling lasers needed to support the superradiant laser and our other, trapped Ca+ ion experiments.

[1]  H. Liu et al. PRL 125, 253602 (2020)

Presenters

  • Andrew A Lesak

    University of Oregon

Authors

  • Andrew A Lesak

    University of Oregon

  • Sean J Brudney

    University of Oregon

  • Aaron X Casserly

    University of Oregon

  • Chester J Hamilton Mantel

    University of Oregon

  • Jeremy M Metzner

    University of Oregon, Oregon Center for Optics

  • Isam D Moore

    University of Oregon

  • Alexander D Quinn

    University of Oregon

  • Vikram Sandhu

    Georgia Institute of Technology, Georgia Tech Research Institute

  • David J Wineland

    University of Oregon

  • David T Allcock

    University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403, USA, University of Oregon