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Atom Optics for Gravitational Wave Detection

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1 Atom Optics for Gravitational Wave Detection
Holger Müller, U.C. Berkeley Sven Herrmann, Bremen Sheng-wey Chiow, Stanford Steve Chu, U.S. Department of Energy Gallileo Gallilei Institute, Firenze 2009

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5 Why atomic gravitational wave interferometric sensors (AGIS)?
“Mirrors” are light wavefronts, linked by light cones allows for common-mode rejection of vibrations No vibration isolation necessary Distance measurement based on quantum mechanics Action of laser on atom inherent part of operation Sensitivity at 1 Hz New technology, at the beginning of a development

6 AGIS: example Examples: k=2π/1μ, h=10-20, ω=2π*1Hz Φ~3*10-10 n=10,000
=>Φ~3*10-6

7 AGIS: challenges 10,000 photon beam splitters
Common-mode rejection of vibrations Atom sources Low-noise detection of atoms (Squeezing)

8 Multiphoton Beam Splitters

9 Multiphoton Bragg diffraction
E k

10 Raman-Nath regime Short pulses (<<1/wr)
Amplitudes of momentum states are Bessel functions => Very lossy n=0 2 Population 4 6 Interaction strength*interaction time

11 Higher-order adiabatic elimination
Starting point: Adiabatic theory Re-insert into Schrodinger equation:

12 Bragg Regime: Square pulses
Integrals easy… Population of neighbour states (losses) High losses, unless pulses extremely long

13 Bragg Regime: Gaussian pulses
Integrals VERY hard: But can be computed using saddle point method:

14 Requirements ~1W per beam 40mW
Good Gaussian shape (Real-time amplitude control) square Good timing not critical Low noise, ~1/n Low wavefront distortion, ~1/n not critical Low vibration, ~1/n H.M et al, PRA, in press H.M. et al, Appl. Phys. B 84, 633 (2006); Opt. Lett. 31, 202 (2006); Opt. Lett. 30, 3323 (2005).

15 >5W injection locked Ti:sapphire laser
Reliable: re-locks automatically Pump: 10-W Verdi & 16-W Ar+

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19 Next steps: Lattice cooling
Raman Sideband Cooling Next steps: Lattice cooling

20 12, 20, and 24-photon Interferometry
12th order: 144 fold sensitivity 72% of opt. contrast H.M. et al., PRL 100, (2008)

21 18 photon vs. 2 photon RB Interferometer
9th order Interferometer: Data 1st order Fit

22 Visibility vs. pulse separation
2222 Problem: Contrast decay Visibility vs. pulse separation Vibration Isolation cutoff Limitation: vibrational phase noise

23 Common-mode rejection of vibrations

24 Simultaneous conjugate Interferometers

25 Results Results 6th order Bragg diffraction, T =1 ms

26 High ħk 12ħk, C=25% 20ħk, C=27% Almost no contrast reduction with higher momentum transfer

27 Long Pulse Separation Time
Results 12ħk, T =100 ms

28 Long Pulse Separation Time
50 times increase No SCIs Contrast at large T limited by cloud expansion 2,500-fold increase in enclosed area for 20ħk.

29 Scalable momentum transfer: Bragg-Bloch-Bragg (BBB) beam splitter

30 Bloch oscillations atoms in accelerated optical lattice
can transfer 1000s of ħk, very robust …but (so far) only to common momentum end-to-end coherence yet to be demonstrated

31 BBB splitter Bloch oscillations AC Stark effect not balanced
Bragg diffraction Assymetry input/output That’s it! But: dual lattices, lattice loaded twice, and one Bragg diffraction.

32 Full BBB splitter Intensity vs. Time Laser difference frequency
Trajectories of the atom

33 BBB interferometers 24 optical lattices: 4 dual 4 quadruple
6 Bragg diffractions: 2 single 2 dual. Will it be coherent? 1: dual lattice 2: single Bragg 3: quadruple lattice 4: dual Bragg

34 BBB interferometers 12ħk, C=17% 18ħk, C=20% …yes!
End-to-end coherence of Bloch oscil-lations Might be scalable to 100s of ħk. 20ħk, C=17% 24ħk, C=15%

35 h/MCs , a, and testing quantum electrodynamics.

36 a from electron g-2 Hypothetical SUSY influence (muon g-2)

37 Photon recoil

38 a from recoil measurements
0.44ppb 0.20ppb 0.03ppb 0.007ppb

39 Mission Impossible Frequency 351 725 718 47 400 Hz
Doppler width Hz Natural linewidth Hz Recoil shift Hz 1ppb accuracy goal: Hz

40 Simultaneous conjugate Interferometers

41 Bayesian estimation to measure α
1-day run, 15,000 data points, T=100ms, 10ħk Df=3.6mrad or Resolution in a: 3.4 ppb

42 Predicted h/m noise& error budget
Clade Wicht This Improved by Laser noise Multiphoton Bragg, SCIs, direct reference lock RF synthesizer Detection (1h) Gouy Phase -0.89(4) (4) <0.05 Large beams w/ high power Pointing -1.00(4) (2) <0.025 Interferometric stabilization Dispersion -9.8(14.0) (30) <0.15 Detuning Laser freq <0.2 MTS <0.01 frequency comb Gravity grad. -9.1(1.0) (2) <0.1 Direct measurement Q. Zeeman <0.1 same internal states Light shift 0.02(10) (0.3) <0.1 Errors in ppb in one hour of integration time.

43 a from electron g-2 05/29/2009 Hypothetical SUSY influence (muon g-2)

44 My personal vision of the Future: Very large Area Atom Interferometers

45 Atomic fountain with cavity
Intensity enhancement Single-atom detection Well-defined wavefronts Factor of further signal enhancement due to N= Bragg diffraction Tests of General Relativity, inertial sensing, navigation, a,... GP-Cs: Ultra-high resolution Sagnac interferometry, sensitive to gravitomagnetism

46 Summary 24 Photon beam splitters with Bragg diffraction
Simultaneous conjugate interferometers: 2,500 fold enclosed area Bloch-Bragg-Bloch beam splitters: 24 photons so far, scalable to 100s of ħk Fine-structure constant 3.6ppb, more to come…

47 AGIS: challenges 10,000 photon beam splitters ()
Common-mode rejection of vibrations  Atom sources () Low-noise detection of atoms () (Squeezing) Ultra low wavefront distortion optics () High-power, ultra-low phase noise lasers at suitable wavelengths - To, for love of truth, forward the search Into the mysteries and marvelous simplicities Of this strange and beautiful universe, Our home. John Archibald Wheeler,

48 XUV atom interferometer
Example: Lithium Can be laser cooled with standard lasers 323.3, 274, 256,… 230 nm, Isat<0.8mW/cm2 2-photon recoil velocity 0.44m/s =>m2 area possible

49 Undergraduate Student
Thanks… PI Steve Chu Postdocs Sven Herrmann Quan Long Graduate Students Sheng-wey Chiow Alexander Senger Undergraduate Student Christoph Vo

50 A wild speculation.

51 Atom interferometry as test of the gravitational redshift?
z=nħkT/M=1…10000μm gz/c2~10-19/mm T T’ Cs atoms f0=Mc2/h~ Hz (de Broglie) Atom interferometer

52 AMO group at Stanford

53 Results for Gaussian pulses
Integrals VERY hard: But can be computed using saddle point method:

54 12 photons: center of the fringe
36% contrast (50% Maximum)

55 Influence of atom temperature
0.1ms 1ms 0.2ms Temperature not critical Phase noise extremely critical Post-phase lock off

56 18 photon interferometer
T=1ms Contrast 12% (theoretical maximum is 25%) Corresponds to 3months of continuous data with n=1

57 Gaussian pulses n=2 4 6 8 10 Loss after p-pulse
H. Mueller et al, arXiv: ; Phys. Rev. A, in press (2008)

58 Bragg diffraction - supersonic neon beam - n=2,4,6
Giltner et al., PRA 52, 3966 (1995)

59 Lattice cooling Lattice cooling to 150nK; 2.5*10^8 atoms
Original Temp. 1.2mK P. Treutlein et al, PRA 2000


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