Four-second optical coherence between different atomic species, and the search for new physics with atomic clocks
ORAL · Invited
Abstract
The extreme precision and accuracy of today’s optical atomic clocks can be used to look for very small deviations from the predictions of the Standard Model, offering a tool to search for beyond Standard Model (BSM) physics complementary to particle accelerators. These searches are based on measuring the frequency ratio of two atomic transitions that depend differently on interactions with BSM particles or fields. In this talk, I will present frequency ratio measurements between atomic clocks based on Al+, Hg+, Sr, and Yb atoms, and the use of these measurements to constrain the coupling of ultralight scalar dark matter candidates to the Standard Model. The precision of traditional, incoherent frequency ratio measurements and resulting constraints on BSM physics are limited by the coherence time of the lasers used to probe the atomic transitions. We have recently demonstrated a new, coherent frequency ratio measurement technique that removes this limitation and achieved a record for the precision of frequency ratio measurements between different atomic species.
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Presenters
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David Leibrandt
National Institute of Standards and Technology Boulder, National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Boulder, National Institute of Standards and Tech, National Institute of Science and Technology, Boulder
Authors
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David Leibrandt
National Institute of Standards and Technology Boulder, National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Boulder, National Institute of Standards and Tech, National Institute of Science and Technology, Boulder