A low-power, low phase noise local oscillator for chip-scale atomic clocks

Author(s):  
A. Brannon ◽  
J. Breitbarth ◽  
Z. Popovic
1997 ◽  
Vol 33 (12) ◽  
pp. 1089 ◽  
Author(s):  
D.-H. Cho ◽  
B.R. Ryum ◽  
T.-H. Han ◽  
S.-M. Lee ◽  
K.-W. Yeom ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sören Dörscher ◽  
Ali Al-Masoudi ◽  
Marcin Bober ◽  
Roman Schwarz ◽  
Richard Hobson ◽  
...  

Abstract The frequency stability of many optical atomic clocks is limited by the coherence of their local oscillator. Here, we present a measurement protocol that overcomes the laser coherence limit. It relies on engineered dynamical decoupling of laser phase noise and near-synchronous interrogation of two clocks. One clock coarsely tracks the laser phase using dynamical decoupling; the other refines this estimate using a high-resolution phase measurement. While the former needs to have a high signal-to-noise ratio, the latter clock may operate with any number of particles. The protocol effectively enables minute-long Ramsey interrogation for coherence times of few seconds as provided by the current best ultrastable laser systems. We demonstrate implementation of the protocol in a realistic proof-of-principle experiment, where we interrogate for 0.5 s at a laser coherence time of 77 ms. Here, a single lattice clock is used to emulate synchronous interrogation of two separate clocks in the presence of artificial laser frequency noise. We discuss the frequency instability of a single-ion clock that would result from using the protocol for stabilisation, under these conditions and for minute-long interrogation, and find expected instabilities of σy(τ) = 8 × 10−16(τ/s)−1/2 and σy(τ) = 5 × 10−17(τ/s)−1/2, respectively.


Author(s):  
Mahalingam Nagarajan ◽  
Kaixue Ma ◽  
Kiat Seng Yeo ◽  
Shou Xian Mou ◽  
Thangarasu Bharatha Kumar

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