Broadband Rydberg Electrometry with a Strontium Lattice Clock
POSTER
Abstract
Atomic systems are both extremely precise due to their inherent lack of drift, and accurate due to their limited, known, and controllable external interactions. To extend atomic sensors to electrometry, we can employ Rydberg states which have high electric field sensitivities over a large bandwidth from DC to THz. Current Rydberg atomic electrometers are often based on warm vapor cells, which are limited due to Doppler effects rather than the fundamental limits of the atomic system. We present both theoretical and experimental progress towards an ultra-cold strontium clock electrometer which combines an optical lattice clock with the high electric field sensitivity and bandwidth of Rydberg atoms. The frequency of the clock transition is made susceptible to external electric fields through off-resonant Rydberg dressing of the excited state of the clock transition. Shifts in the clock frequency are determined using standard lattice clock interferometry techniques. This design also permits leveraging the Rydberg atoms for strong interactions as well as electric field sensitivity, paving the way for entanglement-enhanced electric-field metrology.
Presenters
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Wei J Li
University of Maryland College Park
Authors
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Wei J Li
University of Maryland College Park
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Sara Ahanchi
University of Maryland College Park
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Jeffrey G Lee
University of Maryland College Park
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Daniel S Barker
National Institute of Standards and Technology, National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
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Kevin C Cox
US Army Res Dev & Eng Command, U.S. Army DEVCOM Army Research Laboratory
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Gretchen K Campbell
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
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Nathan A Schine
University of Maryland College Park