APS Logo

Towards Experimental Realization of Tractor Atom Interferometer

POSTER

Abstract

Various atom-interferometry techniques have been proposed and realized for tests of fundamental physics and precision measurements related to gravity and inertial sensing. However, they often suffer from inefficient interferometric-path closure, wave-packet dispersion, and large geometric footprint, as long as the atoms are allowed to propagate freely along unconfined directions. To solve these problems, we have proposed a tractor atom interferometer (TAI), in which atoms are confined in all directions by tractor potentials at all times. The tractor potentials tow the atoms along user-programmable paths. TAI features long interferometric times to enhance sensitivity, and flexible design conducive to a cancellation of unwanted effects. Here, we will provide an overview over several proposed acceleration and rotation sensing modes of scalar and spinor TAI. Further, experimental progress in the construction of a prototype TAI setup for background-acceleration sensing is presented. We plan to use a Bose-Einstein condensate of Rb-87 atoms loaded into translating optical lattices to perform a subsequent interferometric protocol. Updates on the experimental apparatus, the laser systems, as well as the timing controls will be provided.

Publication: A. Duspayev and G. Raithel. "Tractor atom interferometry." Physical Review A 104.1 (2021): 013307.<br>G. Raithel, et al. "Principles of tractor atom interferometry." Quantum Science and Technology 8.1 (2022): 014001.<br>B. Dash, et al. "Rotation sensing using tractor atom interferometry." arXiv:2309.06324 (2023).

Presenters

  • Lefeng Zhou

    University of Michigan

Authors

  • Lefeng Zhou

    University of Michigan

  • Alisher Duspayev

    University of Michigan

  • Bineet K Dash

    University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, University of Michigan

  • Ryan Cardman

    University of Michigan

  • Carlos Owens

    University of Michigan

  • Michael H Goerz

    DEVCOM Army Research Laboratory

  • Sebastian C Carrasco

    DEVCOM Army Research Laboratory

  • Vladimir S Malinovsky

    DEVCOM Army Research Lab Adelphi

  • Georg A Raithel

    University of Michigan