The Next-Generation NIST <sup>27</sup>Al<sup>+</sup> Clock
ORAL
Abstract
The NIST aluminum ion optical clock operates based on quantum logic spectroscopy of the 1S0 ⟷ 3P0 transition in 27Al+, together with a 25Mg+ ion for three-dimensional ground-state cooling and state readout. The previous clock achieved a systematic uncertainty below 10-18 and clock stability of 1.2x10-15/√(τ) [1]. The leading systematic uncertainty of this clock was due to time dilation from driven micromotion, and the stability was limited by quantum projection noise. The next-generation NIST aluminum-ion clock will improve on both of these limitations. A redesigned ion trap demonstrates significantly reduced residual micromotion, while a new vacuum system and larger usable trap volume will enable operation with multiple 27Al+ ions. Simultaneous interrogation of multiple aluminum ions will reduce quantum projection noise below the single-ion limit. Here, we report the design and commisioning of the new trap, including measurements of systematic shifts for a single ion and preparation for multi-ion operation.
[1] Brewer et al., PRL 123, 033201 (2019)
[1] Brewer et al., PRL 123, 033201 (2019)
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Presenters
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Mason C Marshall
NIST, National Institute of Standards and Technology
Authors
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Mason C Marshall
NIST, National Institute of Standards and Technology
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Daniel Rodriguez Castillo
NIST / CU Boulder, NIST/CU Boulder
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Willa Dworschack
NIST / CU Boulder
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Asad Contractor
NIST / UCLA, NIST/CU Boulder
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Chin-wen Chou
NIST / CU Boulder, University of Colorado, Boulder, NIST-Boulder
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David Leibrandt
NIST / UCLA, UCLA
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David B Hume
NIST