ATOM INTERFEROMETRY IN DYNAMIC ENVIRONMENTS
20180267479 ยท 2018-09-20
Assignee
Inventors
- Krish Kotru (Boston, MA, US)
- Justin M. Brown (Cambridge, MA, US)
- David L. Butts (Boston, MA)
- Richard E. Stoner (Framingham, MA)
- Jennifer T. Choy (Cambridge, MA, US)
- David M.S. Johnson (Somerville, MA, US)
- Nicole Pomeroy (Waltham, MA, US)
- Stephen P. Smith (Acton, MA, US)
- Nancy Wu (Cambridge, MA, US)
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
Methods and apparatus that provide for inertial sensing. In one example, a method for inertial sensing includes trapping and cooling a cloud of atoms, applying a first beam splitter pulse sequence to the cloud of atoms, applying one or more augmentation pulses to the cloud of atoms subsequent to applying the first beam splitter pulse sequence, applying a mirror sequence to the cloud of atoms, applying a one or more augmentation pulses to the cloud of atoms subsequent to applying the mirror sequence, applying a second beam splitter pulse sequence to the cloud of atoms subsequent to applying the second augmentation pulse, modulating at least one of a phase and an intensity of at least one of the first and the second beam splitter pulse sequences, performing at least one measurement on the cloud of atoms, and generating a control signal based on the at least one measurement.
Claims
1-19. (canceled)
20. A method for inducing momentum transfer, comprising: trapping and cooling an atom cloud including a plurality of atoms; applying a sequence of adiabatic rapid passage (ARP) light pulses to the plurality of atoms to induce momentum transfer, the sequence including: applying a first /2 ARP sweep; after a first dwell time subsequent to the first /2 ARP sweep, applying a mirror ARP sweep; and after a second dwell time subsequent to the mirror ARP sweep, applying a second /2 ARP sweep; applying a sequence of ARP augmentation pulses to the plurality of atoms to induce additional momentum transfer, the sequence including: applying at least one ARP augmentation pulse subsequent to applying the first /2 ARP sweep and prior to applying the mirror ARP sweep; and applying at least one ARP augmentation pulse subsequent to applying the mirror ARP sweep and prior to applying the second /2 ARP sweep; modulating at least one of a phase and an intensity of at least one of the first and the second /2 ARP sweeps; performing at least one measurement associated with induced momentum transfer of the atom cloud; and generating a control signal based on the at least one measurement.
21. The method of claim 20, wherein the at least one measurement includes measuring at least one of an acceleration and a rotation of at least a portion of the plurality of atoms forming the atom cloud.
22. An atom interferometer, comprising: an atom cloud including a plurality of atoms; a trap configured to trap and cool the plurality of atoms to a predetermined temperature and launch the plurality of atoms into an interferometry region; at least one laser light source disposed adjacent to the interferometry region and configured to apply a sequence of adiabatic rapid passage (ARP) light pulses to the interferometry region; an electro-optic modulator coupled to the at least one laser light source and configured to sweep a Raman detuning frequency of the light pulses; an amplifier coupled to the at least one laser light source and configured to modulate an optical intensity of the at least one laser light source; and a controller coupled to the at least one laser light source, the electro-optic modulator, and the amplifier and configured to: direct the sequence of ARP light pulses at the atom cloud to induce adiabatic transitions between internal quantum levels of at least a fraction of the plurality of atoms during the sequence of ARP light pulses; and obtain at least one measurement from the atom cloud based on the adiabatic transitions.
23. The atom interferometer of claim 22, wherein the at least one laser light source is further configured to apply a sequence of ARP augmentation pulses to the interferometry region and the controller is further configured to direct the sequence of ARP augmentation pulses.
24. The atom interferometer of claim 23, wherein the at least one laser light source comprises counter-propagating beams of light directed at the atom cloud.
25. A method for atomic time-keeping, comprising: trapping and cooling a cloud of atoms to a predetermined temperature; applying a first adiabatic rapid passage (ARP) beam splitter pulse to the cloud of atoms; after a first predetermined dwell time, applying a second ARP beam splitter pulse to the cloud of atoms subsequent to applying the first ARP beam splitter pulse; modulating at least one of a phase and an intensity of at least one of the first and the second ARP beam splitter pulses; performing at least one measurement on the cloud of atoms during an interrogation time following the second ARP beam splitter pulse; and generating a clock signal based on the at least one measurement.
26. The method of claim 25, wherein the clock signal achieves an Allan deviation of 8e-13 at =200 seconds for measurements acquired at 0.89 Hz.
27. The method of claim 20, wherein the at least one measurement is performed during an interrogation time of at least 1 millisecond.
28. The method of claim 27, wherein the at least one measurement is performed during an interrogation time is in a range from 1 to 17 milliseconds.
29. The method of claim 20, wherein the sequence of ARP light pulses are applied at a Rabi frequency of at least 88 kHz.
30. The method of claim 20, further comprising calculating an acceleration sensitivity parameter.
31. The atom interferometer of claim 23, wherein the at least one laser light source is configured to apply the sequence of ARP light pulses at a Rabi frequency of at least 88 kHz.
32. The atom interferometer of claim 31, wherein the Rabi frequency is about 250 kHz.
33. The atom interferometer of claim 23, wherein the at least one laser light source has a 1/e.sup.2 diameter of 7 mm
34. The method of claim 25, wherein applying the second ARP beam splitter pulse includes applying at least two /2 ARP beam splitter pulses.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
[0017] Various aspects of at least one embodiment are discussed below with reference to the accompanying figures, which are not intended to be drawn to scale. The figures are included to provide an illustration and a further understanding of the various aspects and embodiments, and are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification, but are not intended as a definition of the limits of any particular embodiment. The drawings, together with the remainder of the specification, serve to explain principles and operations of the described and claimed aspects and embodiments. In the figures, each identical or nearly identical component that is illustrated in various figures is represented by a like numeral. For purposes of clarity, not every component may be labeled in every figure. In the figures:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0037] Atom interferometry may be used in a variety of applications, including precision metrology applications such as inertial sensors, accelerometers, and gyroscopes. For example, Raman pulse atom interferometry can be applied to compact atomic clocks, and as an optical interrogation modality, it eliminates the need for antennas and cavities that are typically used in direct microwave interrogation. Thus, the size and complexity of the corresponding system may be reduced. Aspects and embodiments disclosed herein use adiabatic rapid passage (ARP) in timekeeping and large momentum transfer (LMT) inertial sensing applications. In particular, a timekeeping method based on ARP in Raman lightpulse atom interferometry is disclosed that may be applied to compact devices used in dynamic environments. Aspects and embodiments are directed to methods and systems for optical Ramsey interrogation that demonstrates reduced sensitivity to optical beam power variations and other systemic effects. In addition, various aspects are directed to Raman atom interferometry inertial sensing that demonstrates increased sensitivity using LMT based on ARP techniques. According to at least one embodiment, high contrast atomic interference with momentum transfer as high as 30 k using 9 K atom clouds is disclosed. The ability to use such relatively hot atoms enables operation at high repetition rates for both maximal sensor bandwidth and increased sensitivity.
[0038] Typically, high sensitivity in laboratory atom interferometry can be traded for reduced size by shortening the Ramsey dwell time, i.e., the measurement time, and interrogating atoms in the cooling and trapping region (i.e., carrying out both atom trapping and interrogation in the same volume). In dynamic environments, a short measurement time may have the added benefit of reducing unconstrained motion of the atom cloud. For example, if measurements are completed on a 10 ms time scale, then a cold atom cloud experiencing 1-5 g accelerations is displaced from the trap site by <1 cm, which enables recapture of cold atoms and fast data rates with narrow laser beams.
[0039] Methods of using microwaves for atomic timekeeping typically require well-engineered cavities or waveguides, which constrain the minimum size obtainable and may be adversely affected by thermal environments or vibrations. Alternative approaches that circumvent the use of a cavity include optically driven stimulated Raman transitions between alkali hyperfine ground states. However, optical interrogation methods introduce separate challenges from microwave interrogation, such as phase errors caused by AC Stark shifts and spatially dependent Rabi rates caused by the Gaussian intensity profile of the laser beam. CPT timekeeping systems using optical fields have been shown to achieve a fractional frequency uncertainty of 210.sup.12 at 1000 s, with certain magnetic-field instabilities.
[0040] Aspects and embodiments are directed to methods and systems for timekeeping that use optical interrogation methods, such as optical Ramsey interrogation, that suppress sensitivity to light shifts and Rabi rate inhomogeneities. The disclosed approach uses atom optics that are based on Raman adiabatic rapid passage (ARP), which may also be referred to herein as Raman chirped adiabatic passage (RCAP), which is inspired by, and isomorphic to the adiabatic rapid passage techniques used in nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. According to various aspects, ARP is less sensitive to thermal and spatial distribution of atoms. In ARP, a slow sweep of the radio frequency (RF) frequency preserves the initial angle between the drive field and magnetization vector, thereby allowing efficient population inversion and production of coherences. An atom subject to coherent laser beam pairs is analogous to a classical magnetization subjected to an RF magnetic field of fixed frequency. In this case, the fixed frequency corresponds to the frequency different between the coherent laser beams in the par. Accordingly, a Raman pulse can be considered as an RF field of constant frequency effectively torqueing the classical magnetization about its axis.
[0041] In NMR, ARP inverts the population in a two-level system by slowly sweeping the angular frequency of a rotating magnetic field through the Rabi resonance. In the frame of the time-dependent field, the nuclear spin precesses about the effective magnetic field with a latitude that slowly tilts from the north to the south pole. As discussed further below, the Raman ARP approach used herein uses an analogous sweep of the frequency difference of the Raman optical fields through the two-photon resonance. ARP may impart smaller phase errors and may address broader thermal velocity distributions than conventional pulsed techniques for atom interferometry. In addition, RCAP may permit implementation of atom interferometer inertial sensors of improved ability to accommodate highly dynamic environments. Typical beamsplitter techniques using fixed-frequency Raman pulses are sensitive to Doppler-induced detunings that can produce phase errors in dynamic environments. In addition, a primary purpose of a Raman pulse is to accurately imprint the laser phase on the phase of the atomic coherence, and if the pulse is applied off resonance, substantial phase errors may result. This sensitivity may be avoided by using RCAP in lieu of a standard Raman pulse beamsplitter. Specifically, phase errors caused by AC Stark shifts may be greatly reduced by use of RCAP. Raman ARP reduces the phase sensitivity of a Ramsey sequence to the differential AC Stark shift because the first beamsplitter does not imprint a relative phase on the quantum state in the adiabatic limit. ARP is also robust to intensity variations, since transfer efficiency is not a strong function of Rabi rate. Thus, interferometer contrast is preserved in the presence of intensity fluctuations and gradients, and the phase is insensitive to small changes in frequency sweep parameters, as discussed further below. Stimulated Raman adiabatic passage (STIRAP) includes applying two resonant Raman beams with separate time-varying intensities to achieve varying orientation of the effective RF field. Thus, adiabatic transfer in a three-level system results from time-delayed intensity modulations of two optical fields. However, variation of intensity poses significant control and stability problems. Raman ARP differs from STIRAP, and frequency-swept ARP has at least two advantages over STIRAP: (1) in a Ramsey sequence, spontaneous emission during the second STRAP pulse reduces the maximum interferometer contrast by approximately a factor of 2, and (2) the presence of multiple excited levels in alkali-metal atoms reintroduces residual Stark shifts to STIRAP, with dependencies on pulse duration, optical intensity, and single-photon laser detuning. In fact, precision control of laser power (intensity) is far more difficult than precision control of other parameters, such as laser frequency. Raman ARP atom optics according to various embodiments may provide many of the benefits afforded by varied laser intensity, but with fewer drawbacks.
[0042] As discussed further below, efficient population inversion and Ramsey interferometry can be achieved based on Raman ARP. Further, Raman ARP may be used to suppress phase deviations due to AC Stark shifts by about a factor of 100. In addition, deliberate perturbations to frequency sweep parameters do not introduce resolvable shifts in phase. The Raman ARP systems and methods disclosed herein may achieve a fractional frequency uncertainty of 3.510.sup.12 after 200 s of averaging.
[0043] As discussed herein, Raman ARP may also be applied to the problem of enhancing the sensitivity of Raman pulse based acceleration measurements. Such an enhancement may be vital to maintaining adequate inertial sensitivity at the short measurement times necessitated by dynamic environment operation. Large Momentum Transfer (LMT) atom interferometry comprises the use of additional Raman pulses to increase inertial sensitivity. Embodiments discussed herein use ARP events in lieu of Raman pulses to provide this sensitivity enhancement. The product of scale factor (the multiplier to convert an acceleration to an interferometer phase shift) times interferometer contrast (the peak-to-peak excursion in interferometer population transfer as a function of interferometer phase) is proportional to Raman accelerometer SNR. According to various embodiments, this figure of merit is more than three times the corresponding figure for the standard three-pulse interrogation sequence. In other words, in a measurement of a given duration, the ARP-based LMT technique disclosed herein demonstrates the potential to increase measurement sensitivity by 2-2.8 (depending on measurement time) compared to standard 3-pulse interferometers.
[0044] Frequency-swept ARP may be used for robust population inversion in NMR, and its effect on a two-state system can be visualized on the Bloch sphere shown in and |F=3, m.sub.F=0
states, respectively. The generalized Rabi rate {right arrow over ()}.sub.gen 110 represents the Raman pulse drive field and is analogous to the effective magnetic field in the NMR system. When the drive field is applied, {circumflex over (p)}120 precesses about {right arrow over ()}.sub.gen 110 at the generalized Rabi frequency .sub.gen={square root over (.sub.eff.sup.2+.sup.2)}, where .sub.eff 130 is the magnitude of the two-photon Rabi rate, and =.sub.1.sub.2.sub.HFS (140) is the Raman detuning, and precession can be expressed as {dot over (p)}={right arrow over ()}.sub.gen{circumflex over (p)}). The polar angle 150 of the drive field is =-arctan (.sub.eff/) . The azimuthal angle 160 represents the phase difference between the two Raman frequency components. If the drive field undergoes a polar angle rotation at a rate {dot over ()}<<.sub.gen, {circumflex over (p)} 120 encircles {right arrow over ()}.sub.gen 110 before 150 changes appreciably. As a result, rapid precession causes {circumflex over (p)} 120 to adiabatically follow .sub.gen 110. The projection of {circumflex over (p)} 120 onto the drive field, which is defined as {right arrow over (p)}, can thus be dragged anywhere on the Bloch sphere. Experimentally, the polar angle 150 is controlled by sweeping the detuning 140 through resonance, over a frequency range that is large in comparison to .sub.eff 130. According to certain aspects, the two-state model is appropriate because the single photon detuning satisfies
[0045] <<.sub.eff. This parameter regime allows for adiabatic elimination of all intermediary excited states in the 6.sup.2P.sub.3/2 manifold.
[0046] ARP is generally advantageous when inversion is required in the presence of an inhomogeneous drive field. Since the Rabi rate in this case is position dependent, precise control of spin precession cannot be achieved simultaneously over the entire ensemble. As a result, fixed-frequency and /2 pulses tend to over- or undershoot the desired pulse area for a given atom. With an ARP sweep, however, transfer efficiency in the adiabatic limit ultimately depends on the projection of {circumflex over (p)} onto {right arrow over ()}.sub.gen, namely {right arrow over (p)}, which is independent of precession. In the typical approach to ARP, (t) is linearly chirped through resonance. According to various embodiments disclosed herein, a nonlinear sweep (i.e., using laser beam pairs in which the frequency difference is swept over time, otherwise referred to as a frequency sweep) is instead performed that rapidly changes the polar angle at the beginning and end of the adiabatic passage, when the adiabatic condition, i.e., the tipping rate is much slower than the rate of precession, is well satisfied. The optical intensity may also be reduced near the beginning and end of the sweep. A short sweep minimizes dephasing attributed to spontaneous emission. The frequency sweep used herein is expressed below by Equation (1):
where [0047] .sub. sets the total sweep duration, (a first sweep parameter), [0048] .sub.arp controls the sweet rate without perturbing its duration or range, i.e., defines the shape of the ARP frequency sweep (a second sweep parameter), and [0049] =arctan(.sub.max/.sub.arp), where .sub.max is the maximum detuning (a third sweep parameter).
[0050] To quantify the adiabaticity of a particular sweep, a unitless parameter Q(t) is defined where Q(t)=gen/|{dot over ()}|. Near resonance, and when >>.sub.eff=.sub.arp, Q is equivalent to T.sub. in units of Raman pulses. In other words, Q=n, when T.sub.=nt.sub., where t.sub. is the duration of a Raman pulse. According to various aspects, Q5 provides sufficient adiabaticity for robust population transfer. According to other aspects, sweeps may begin or end near resonance (when Q is minimized), and Q may have a value of 10 or 26. The frequency sweep described by Equation (1) is coupled with an intensity modulation I(t), which is expressed below by Equation (2):
where [0051] I.sub.0 is the maximum intensity, and [0052] is a unitless parameter having a typical value of 7.5. [0053] Since I(0)=I(T.sub.)=0, the drive field at the beginning and end of the sweep is essentially parallel with the z axis of the Bloch sphere. This alignment helps maximize transfer efficiency when atoms are prepared in one of the clock states.
[0054] According to various aspects, a simple Bloch model of a two-level atom (i.e., refer to the Bloch sphere of
[0055] Ramsey sequences are commonly viewed as atom interferometers comprising two /2 pulses, or beamsplitters, separated by an interrogation time T. An atom beamsplitter divides the atomic wave packet in two, with the resulting partial wave packets assuming different hyperfine and momentum states. In practice, the co-propagating Raman optical fields may impart a negligible momentum kick. A Ramsey sequence derived from these beamsplitters is then primarily an atom interferometer for the internal hyperfine states of the atom. Raman ARP serves as an effective beamsplitter for a Ramsey atom interferometer when the sweep is stopped midway, at the Raman resonance. In part (a) of
[0056] In ARP, a slow sweep of the radio frequency (RF) frequency preserves the initial angle between the drive field and magnetization vector, thereby allowing efficient population inversion and production of coherences. An atom subject to coherent laser beam pairs is analogous to a classical magnetization subjected to an RF magnetic field of fixed frequency. In this case, the fixed frequency corresponds to the frequency difference between the coherent laser beams in the pair. Accordingly, a Raman pulse can be considered as an RF field of constant frequency effectively torqueing the classical magnetization about its axis.
[0057] Referring to
[0058] Referring to
[0059]
[0060]
[0061]
[0062] In certain instances, use of a far off resonant laser source for the tipping field permits implementation of either a mirror sweep or a standard Raman mirror pulse in interferometer applications. There is presently no mechanism for implementing a mirror function with STRAP, and as a result, STRAP-only interferometers realize reduced interferometer contrast as compared to RCAP or Raman-based interferometers.
[0063] According to various aspects, Raman ARP has greatly reduced sensitivity to off-resonant drive fields compared to Raman /2 pulses. For example, if the field in
[0064] Referring back to
having a value of 110.sup.12 for an averaging time of 1 s. In addition, the cloud remains within the 1/e.sup.2 intensity radius of the Raman beam for transverse accelerations up to 5 g.
where P is the measured transition probability, i.e., the normalized atom count, and free parameters such as contrast A, background offset B, and Raman detuning offset .sub.0, are determined through minimization of the sum of squares of the residuals. For both the Raman /2 and T.sub.=26t.sub. cases, the fit uncertainty in .sub.0/2 was 0.24 Hz, which indicated similar short-term stability.
EXAMPLES
[0065] The function and advantages of these and other embodiments will be more fully understood from the following examples. These examples are intended to be illustrative in nature and are not to be considered as limiting the scope of the systems and methods discussed herein. The following examples demonstrate atom interferometry with Raman chirped adiabatic passage sweeps using the apparatus described below.
[0066] In particular, the interferometry experiments were conducted using D2 line cesium 133 atoms and were conducted inside an octagonal 80-cm.sup.3 machined-quartz cell, having a diameter of 2.75 inches, such as the one shown at 800 in .fwdarw.|F=4
transition (where F denotes a hyperfine level in the 6.sup.2 P.sub.3/2 manifold) with light polarized linearly and parallel to the bias field until 90% of the atoms were in the |F=4, m.sub.F=0
dark state. Light resonant with the |F=3z,27 .fwdarw.|F=4) transition simultaneously pumped atoms out of F=3. A microwave pulse tuned to the clock transition transferred atoms from the dark state to |F=3, m.sub.F=0
. A subsequent laser pulse, resonant with the |F=4
=.fwdarw.|F=5 cycling transition, pushed atoms remaining in F=4 out of the interaction region. Interferometry began with >97% of the remaining atoms initially in the |F=3, m.sub.F=0) clock state. These atoms were interrogated in a Ramsey sequence, which comprised two atom beamsplitters (e.g., Raman /2 pulses) separated by an interrogation time T that ranged from 1 to 17 ms. The final state of the interferometer consisted of atoms in superpositions of the F=3 and F=4 clock states. To extract the interferometer phase, the fraction of atoms in F=4 after laser induced fluorescence were measured. Specifically, light resonant with the |F=4
.fwdarw.|F5) transition was applied, and the resulting fluorescence was associated with states that had collapsed to F=4. A second pulse of the same light then pushed these atoms out of the interaction region. The remaining atoms in F=3 were optically pumped to F=4 and fluoresced in a similar manner The sum of these two fluorescence signals was proportional to the total population and the ratio of total fluorescence to fluorescence from the F=4 atoms provided a normalized readout.
[0067] The cesium clock transition (|F=3, m.sub.F=0.fwdarw.|F=4, m.sub.F=0
) was driven using stimulated Raman processes via intermediate excited states in the 6.sup.2 P.sub.3/2 manifold, as shown in
and 4
are coupled by a stimulated Raman transition with single-photon detuning 145, Raman detuning 140, and optical frequencies .sub.1 170a and .sub.2 170b. The Raman optical frequencies, .sub.1 and .sub.2 (170a and 170b), were generated by phase modulating the output of an external cavity diode laser (100 kHz linewidth, 50 mW) with an electro-optic modulator (EOM), i.e., a phase modulator. The optical spectrum contained frequency sidebands spaced about the carrier by integer multiples of the Zeeman-shifted hyperfine splitting frequency .sub.HFS/2=9 192 631 770+324 Hz. To reduce spontaneous emission, the Raman laser was blue-detuned by 2.02 GHz with respect to the |F=3
.fwdarw.|F=4
transition. At this detuning, the differential AC Stark shift (i.e., the difference of the AC Stark shifts of the clock states) was canceled when the optical power was 10% larger in the carrier frequency than in each first-order sideband. To obtain agile control over the microwave signal that drove the EOM, a single-sideband mixer (Polyphase SSB90110A) was used to combine the 30-MHz output of a 625-MS/s arbitrary waveform generator (Agilent N8241A) with a constant 9.163-GHz signal (Agilent E8257D). The phase, frequency, and power of the resulting RF signal were controlled through the waveform generator, enabling rapid frequency sweeps for Raman ARP. An acousto-optic modulator placed before the EOM switched the Raman light in 50 ns, and a tapered amplifier downstream of the EOM increased the total Raman optical power presented to the atoms to 40 mW. The optical spectrum of the tapered amplifier contained a 30-nm-wide pedestal carrying a small amount of resonant light. To reduce spontaneous emission during the interferometer, the resonant light from the pedestal was filtered by passing the output of the tapered amplifier through a Cs reference vapor cell. The Raman beam was vertically oriented, circularly polarized, and delivered to the cell using a fiber-coupled collimator with 7.1-mm 1/e.sup.2 intensity diameter. The co-propagating pair of carrier and 1 sideband frequencies drove the dominant Raman transition, which was Doppler shifted by 30.7 Hz/(m/s), or 0.3 Hz/ms in a 1-g environment.
[0068] The interferometry experiments described below generally involved extracting interferograms while deliberately varying parameters like the differential AC Stark shift or the two-photon Rabi rate. To generate an interferograms, the transition probability was measured while shifting the laser phase difference between the Raman optical fields. This phase difference was scanned over 17 values in steps of /4 rad, and the transition probability at each phase was measured five times consecutively to enable averaging. With a per-shot data rate of 1.6 Hz, a full interferograms was acquired every 53 s. To isolate slow systematic variations due to oscillator drift and environmental magnetic fields, interferograms for ARP, Raman, and microwave pulses were acquired consecutively, within 2.7 min, at a particular parameter setting. Parameters were varied nonmonotonically to further reduce contributions from slow systematic trends. Parameter values of interest were cycled through three times for additional averaging.
[0069] A cold atom frequency standard based on Ramsey sequences is likely to experience parameter fluctuations during operation outside the laboratory. In dynamic environments, variations in optical power, RF power, and atom cloud position may affect Ramsey interferograms. One or more of the examples discussed below demonstrate how Raman ARP beamsplitters in a Ramsey sequence suppress one or more of these effects.
Example 1
Light Shifts During a Pulse
[0070] A Ramsey sequence based on Raman ARP affords an important advantage of Raman /2 pulses: light shifts experienced during a pulse leave the interferometer phase unperturbed. The presence of a light shift during Raman ARP moves the center frequency of the sweep off resonance. The beamsplitter shown in part (b) of
[0071] The sensitivity of three types of Ramsey sequences to the differential AC Stark shift .sub.ac were tested: (1) Raman /2 pulse sequences, (2) Raman ARP sequences with a sweep duration T.sub. of 10t.sub., and (3) Raman ARP sequences with a sweep duration of 26t.sub.. The contrast A, background offset B, and systematic phase offset for each interferogram were recorded. The transition probability P is related to these quantities by Equation (5) above, where the detuning dependence in the argument of the cosine function is replaced by +, and is the programed phase difference between the two Ramsey pulses. Entire interferograms were extracted to determine A, B, and simultaneously, which suppressed undesirable cross-coupling effects in the measurement of P. This technique differs from another, simpler approach in which each measurement of phase is related to a single measurement of transition probability made with =/2 and 0. In this latter approach, phase measurements are susceptible to variations in A and B since the transition probability varies with these parameters, i.e., see Equation (4).
[0072] For each AC Stark shift setting, the three types of interferometers were measured sequentially, three times over 8 minutes. To extract an interferogram, was scanned over two fringes in steps of /4 rad, and to enable averaging, each phase condition was repeated five consecutive times. The AC Stark shift was varied by adjusting the relative optical power in the two Raman frequency components. This meant that the AC Stark shift was controlled with the modulation depth of the electro-optic modulator (EOM) in the Raman beam path, which in turn adjusted the ratio of the optical powers in each Raman frequency. In essence, the light shift .sub.ac was deliberately varied by changing the ratio of optical powers in each Raman frequency. At each setting of the modulation depth, the overall optical power was adjusted with the tapered amplifier to maintain .sub.eff/2=73 kHz to within 2%. The light shift was assumed to be the Raman detuning at which population transfer with a Raman pulse was maximized. These calibration steps were followed by setting the oscillator frequency to the Zeeman-shifted clock resonance before interferometry commenced. Thus, the oscillator was detuned by the light shift during application of the pulse, but resonant with the atoms during the Ramsey dwell period. The short interrogation time T=1 ms suppressed the sensitivity to oscillator instabilities and helped isolate phase shifts associated with pulse dynamics.
[0073]
[0074] A more detailed view of the Raman ARP interrogations is shown in
[0075] The differential Stark shift with 2 GHz in practice may be restricted to 0.02.sub.eff21 KHz, due to 1% power fluctuations in the RF signal modulating the EOM. Below this bound, the measurements and stabilization of RF power may be difficult to obtain. Thus, the experiment was repeated over a narrower detuning range near Sac=0. In this example, .sub.eff was not calibrated from one condition to the next, because the measured variation was 2% of the nominal setting. The light shift was calibrated to the modulation depth of the EOM, which was then tracked via real-time RF power measurements. Linear fits to the Raman ARP phase offsets are shown in
Example 2
Comparative Stability
[0076] Experiments were also conducted that illustrate the comparative effect of a stochastic AC Stark shift on relative clock stability.
[0077] The measurements of
[0078] The results of
[0079] The examples discussed above relate to Raman pulse timekeeping with ARP. The examples discussed below are directed to large momentum transfer (LMT) Raman pulse interferometry with ARP. Specifically, experiments were performed that applied ARP sweeps to acceleration measurement based on LMT Raman interferometry. As discussed above, LMT Raman interferometry may be used for enhancing the sensitivity of inertial measurement through the use of pulses additional to the simple 3-pulse sequence first used for acceleration measurement. These additional pulses, which are referred to herein augmentation pulses, serve to increase the sensitivity of Raman pulse interferometry by increasing the photon-induced spatial separation of the interfering wavepackets. The utility of sensitivity enhancement may be particularly apparent in dynamic environment sensing, wherein interrogation times T are necessarily limited by inertially induced cloud motion, while inertial measurement sensitivity (either rotation or acceleration) scales proportionally to T.sup.2. High repetition rates enabled by atom recapture have been shown to achieve <g level acceleration measurement using short interrogation times of <8 msec. LMT offers another means of restoring some of the sensitivity lost as a consequence of reduced interrogation time. According to various aspects, a high contrast LMT interferometry method is disclosed that uses atoms at relatively high atom cloud temperatures that is also compatible with high efficiency atom recapture, and thus operates at high repetition rates.
[0080] High contrast Raman atom interferometry acceleration sensing may be achieved with 9 K atoms that includes exhibition of 4% contrast in an interferometer imparting 30 k momentum separation between interferometer arms. Typical demonstrations of LMT employ either ultracold atoms (tens of nano-K) or atom clouds with reduced effective temperature along the direction of the Raman beam (500 nano-K).
[0081]
[0082] As defined herein, LMT order N is the number of augmentation events used to open and close the space time diagram, as shown in
Example 3
Contrast vs. LMT Order
[0083]
[0084] The results indicate that the combination of ARP sweeps with the use of high Rabi rate (250 kHz for these experiments) and relatively large Raman beam diameter (7 mm 1/e.sup.2 diameter) afforded efficient population transfer with 9 K (atom clouds. For example, referring to
Example 4
T.SUB..=3t.SUB. ARP Augmentation Event
[0085] Though good contrast was observed at T=1 msec, contrast at longer interrogation times was also assessed.
where [0086] C is the interferometer contrast, [0087] .sub.1 is the measured phase noise per shot in radians, and [0088] f.sub.r is the repetition frequency (rate at which acceleration measurements are executed, in Hz).
[0089] An acceleration sensitivity parameter may be defined as shown below by Equation (6):
C.Math.(2N+1)k.sub.effT.sup.2 Equation (6):
[0090] The acceleration sensitivity parameter is plotted in
[0091] The measured phase change per unit applied acceleration, i.e., the scalefactor may be expressed Equation (7) below:
scalefactor=(2N+1)k.sub.effT.sup.2 Equation (2):
[0092]
[0093] The aspects disclosed herein in accordance with the present invention, are not limited in their application to the details of construction and the arrangement of components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the accompanying drawings. These aspects are capable of assuming other embodiments and of being practiced or of being carried out in various ways.
[0094] Examples of specific implementations are provided herein for illustrative purposes only and are not intended to be limiting. In particular, acts, components, elements, and features discussed in connection with any one or more embodiments are not intended to be excluded from a similar role in any other embodiments.
[0095] Also, the phraseology and terminology used herein is for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limiting. Any references to examples, embodiments, components, elements or acts of the systems and methods herein referred to in the singular may also embrace embodiments including a plurality, and any references in plural to any embodiment, component, element or act herein may also embrace embodiments including only a singularity. References in the singular or plural form are not intended to limit the presently disclosed systems or methods, their components, acts, or elements. The use herein of including, comprising, having, containing, involving, and variations thereof is meant to encompass the items listed thereafter and equivalents thereof as well as additional items. References to or may be construed as inclusive so that any terms described using or may indicate any of a single, more than one, and all of the described terms. In addition, in the event of inconsistent usages of terms between this document and documents incorporated herein by reference, the term usage in the incorporated reference is supplementary to that of this document; for irreconcilable inconsistencies, the term usage in this document controls. Moreover, titles or subtitles may be used in the specification for the convenience of a reader, which shall have no influence on the scope of the present invention.
[0096] Having thus described several aspects of at least one example, it is to be appreciated that various alterations, modifications, and improvements will readily occur to those skilled in the art. For instance, examples disclosed herein may also be used in other contexts. Such alterations, modifications, and improvements are intended to be part of this disclosure, and are intended to be within the scope of the examples discussed herein. Accordingly, the foregoing description and drawings are by way of example only.