Quantum Control Tools for Wavelike Dark Matter Searches with Long-Baseline Atom Interferometry
ORAL · Invited
Abstract
Recent technological advances have paved the way for large-scale atom interferometers to contribute to multiple areas at the forefront of modern physics, including searches for wavelike dark matter, gravitational wave detection, and fundamental quantum science. In an atom interferometer, sequences of laser pulses spatially split, recombine, and interfere the atoms' quantum mechanical states. Typically, the sensitivity of the instrument increases as the number of applied pulses grows larger. However, in practice, experimental nonidealities and tradeoffs limit the fidelity with which each pulse can control the quantum states, limiting the number of pulses that can be applied. In this talk, I will first describe the MAGIS-100 100-meter-tall atom interferometer under construction at Fermilab. I will then discuss some of our recent experimental work to develop quantum optimal control techniques that have the potential to reduce limitations from pulse infidelities, opening a path for MAGIS-100 and related detectors to achieve significantly improved sensitivity.
–
Publication: Yiping Wang, Jonah Glick, Tejas Deshpande, Kenneth DeRose, Sharika Saraf, Natasha Sachdeva, Kefeng Jiang, Zilin Chen, and Tim Kovachy, "Robust Quantum Control via Multipath Interference for Thousandfold Phase Amplification in a Resonant Atom Interferometer." Physical Review Letters (in press), arXiv:2407.11246 (2024).
Presenters
-
Tim Kovachy
Northwestern University
Authors
-
Tim Kovachy
Northwestern University