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Optical clocks, present and
future fundamental physics tests
Pierre Lemonde
LNE-SYRTE
Fractional accuracy of atomic clocks
Systematic effects-accuracy
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•
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Zeeman effect:
– Independent on the clock transition frequency
Potential gain 104
Spectral purity, leakage,...:
– Independent on the clock transition frequency
Potential gain 104
Cold collisions:
– Independent on the clock transition frequency
Potential gain 104
Neighbouring transitions:
– Independent on the clock transition frequency
Potential gain 104
Blackbody radiation shift: differential in fountains
– Cs: 1.7 10-14, Sr, Yb ~ 5 10-15, Hg : 2.4 10-16, Al+ 8 10-18
Potential gain 102
@ Optical frequencies all these effects seem controllable at 10-18 or better !
•
Doppler effect:
– Proportional to the clock frequency for free atoms, a trap is required
Interest of optical clocks
Ultimate gain on the frequency stability : 104
Q~4 1014, N~106, Tc ~ 1s
Ultimate gain on the frequency accuracy > 102
<10-18
-A « good » clock transition
Key ingredients
-Ability to control external degrees of freedom.
-Ultra-stable lasers
Single ion clocks an neutral atom lattice clocks are two possible ways forward
Quantum references: ions or atoms
Multipolar couplings: E2, E3
2P
2P
1/2
2D
3/2
1/2
2D
5/2
369 nm
422 nm
d=3 Hz
674 nm
467 nm
d=0.4Hz
2S
2F
7/2
436 nm
2S
1/2
d=10-9 Hz
1/2
Yb+(PTB, NPL)
Sr+ (NPL,NRC)
Other ions: Hg+ (NIST), Ca+(Innsbruck, Osaka, PIIM)
Intercombination transitions
1P
1P
1
3P
461 nm
698 nm
1
3P
0
167 nm
267 nm
d=1 mHz
1S
0
Sr (Tokyo, JILA, SYRTE,…),
Yb (NIST, INRIM, Tokyo,…)
Hg (SYRTE, Tokyo), In+
d=8 mHz
1S
0
Al+ (NIST)
0
Quantum logic clock
One logic ion for cooling and detection
One clock ion for spectroscopy
External degrees of freedom are coupled via Coulomb interaction
Al+ clocks
C. Chou et al. Science 329, 1630 (2010)
C. Chou et al. PRL 104 070802 (2010)
Al+ clock accuracy budget
Ion clock with sub 10-17 accuracy
C. Chou et al. PRL 104 070802 (2010)
Neutral atom clocks
Trapping neutral atoms
Confinement : standing wave
Trapping : dipole force
(intense laser)
1
0.5
0
Optical lattice
clocks
0
-2.5
-5
-7.5
-10
Trap shifts
-0.5
-0.25
0
0.25
0.5
l/2
D> 10-10
reaching 10-18, effect must be controlled to within 10-8
Problems linked to trapping
Trap depth : light shift of clock states
3 parameters : polarisation, frequency, intensity
Trap depth required to cancel motional effects to within 10-18 : at
least 10 Er (i.e. 36 kHz, or 10-11 in fractional units for Sr)
Both states are shifted. The differential shift should be considered
P. Lemonde, P. Wolf, Phys. Rev. A 72 033409 (2005)
Solution to the trapping problem
Polarisation : use J=0 J=0 transition, which is a forbidden by
selection rules
Intensity : one uses the frequency dependence to cancel the
intensity dependence
Such a configuration exists for alkaline earths 1S0 3P0
3P
0
3S
1
Sr
679 nm
1S
1P
1
0
lm : "longueur d'onde magique"
M. Takamoto et al, Nature 453, 231 (2005)
461 nm
1S
3D
1
3P
0
698 nm
0
2.56 µm
Experimental setup
Ultra-narrow resonance
Lattice clock comparison
Trap effects
E2-M1 Effects
E1 interaction
Traps atoms at the electric field maxima
M1 and E2 interactions
Creates a potential with a different spatial
dependence
E2-M1 Effects
E1 interaction
Traps atoms at the electric field maxima
M1 and E2 interactions
Creates a potential with a different spatial
dependence
This leads to a clock shift
E2-M1 effects
Measurements
The shift is measured by changing n and the
trap depth U0=100-500 Er
•The effect is not resolved, not a problem
•Upper bound 10-17 for U0=800 Er
Trap shifts
•Hyperpolarisability
d<1 µHz/Er2
•Tensor and vector shift. Fully caracterized and under control <10-17
•All known trap effects are well understood and not problematic <10-17
P.G. Westergaard et al., arxiv 1102.1797
87Sr
lattice clock accuracy budget
A. Ludlow et al. Science, 319, 1805 (2008)
• Frequency
difference between Sr clocks at SYRTE <10-16
• 10-17 feasible at room temperature. BBR, a quite hard limit. Next step: cryogenic, Hg ?
Towards a Hg lattice clock
• First
lattice bound spectroscopy of Hg atoms
• First
experimental determination of Hg magic wavelength 362.53 (21) nm
L. Yi et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 106, 073005 (2011)
Optical clocks worldwide
• Ion clocks
– NIST (Al+, Hg+), PTB-QUEST (Yb+, Al+), NPL (Yb+, Sr+),
Innsbruck (Ca+)…
• Neutral atom clocks
– Tokyo (Sr, Hg), JILA (Sr), SYRTE (Sr, Hg), NIST (Yb), PTB
(Sr),…
• Space projects
– SOC project (ESA – HHUD, PTB, SYRTE, U-Firenze)
– SOC2 (EU-FP7)
– Optical clock as an option for STE-QUEST mission
Performing fundamental physics tests implies comparing these clocks
Clock comparisons
• « Round-trip » method for noise compensation
Ultra-stable
1.542 µm laser
Noise
correction
2FP
Fiber
Accumulated
Phase noise
LAB 1
FP
LAB 2
Round-trip noise detection
Link instability
measurement
• Demonstrated at the 10-19 level over hundreds of km over telecom network
• Global comparisons = satellite based systems
•ACES-MWL 2014-2017 down to a few 10-17, L. Cacciapuoti (next talk)
•Mini-DOLL coherent optical link, K. Djerroud et al. Opt. Lett. 35, 1479 (2009)
Fundamental tests on ground
• Stability of fundamental constants
a/a expected improvement by 2 orders of magnitude 10-18/yr
m/m limited by microwave clocks. Possible improvements if
nuclear transitions are used.
• Dependence of a to local gravitational potential
– Expected improvement by 2 orders of magnitude 10-8 d(GM/rc2)
• Massive redondancy due to the large number of atomic
species/transitions
Optical clocks in space
• Earth orbit
– Highly elliptical orbit. x100 improvement on ACES goals
– Optional optical clock for STE-QUEST mission (pre-selected as
M mission in CV2).
S. Schiller et al. Exp. Astron. (2009) 23, 573
• Solar system probe
– Outer solar system (SAGAS-like). Further improvement by 2
orders of magnitude on gravitational red-shift and coupling of a
to gravity. Probe long range gravity.
– Inner solar system. Probe GR in high field.
P. Wolf et al. Exp. Astron. (2009) 23, 651
Transportable Strontium Source (LENS/U.Firenze)-SOC project
main requirements:
1. compact design
2. reliability
3. low power consumption
optical breadboard 120 cm x 90 cm
main planning choices:
1. compact breadboard
for frequency production
2. all lights fiber delivered
3. custom flange holding MOT coils
and oven with 2D cooling
Schioppo et al, Proc. EFTF (2010)
Conclusions
Optival clocks with ions and neutrals now clearly outperform
microwave standards. Present accuracy and long term stability 10-17 .
Where is the limit ?
Long distance comparisons techniques are progressing rapidly.
Different types of clocks, using different atoms and different kind of
transitions allow extremely complete tests of fundamental physics:
stability of fundamental constants, probing gravity and couplings to
other interactions. Redondancy is important in case violations are seen.
Space projects.
Further improvements ? Higher frequencies (UV-X) ? Nuclear
transitions ? Molecular transitions ?