This invention relates to atom interferometers.
Atom interferometry is based on the quantum mechanical interference of atom wave functions. For example, an atom interferometer can have two output ports (A and B) where the probability of an atom appearing at ports A or B depends on the relative phase of two interfering atom wave functions. Typically, the signals from the interferometer ports are simply spatially averaged to provide the interferometer output.
Unfortunately, this has the disadvantage that data from several interferometer runs usually has to be considered in order to extract useful data from the raw interferometer data. In other words, such interferometers do not provide a single-shot mode where useful data can be obtained from a single interferometer run.
We have found that making spatially resolved measurements, in combination with providing a baseline fringe pattern at the interferometer ports, can provide significantly enhanced capability. Two aspects of this idea have been investigated.
In the first aspect, the atoms are configured to expand from an initial point-like spatial distribution. With such a distribution, each atom's final position is approximately proportional to its initial velocity. Since the interferometer phase shift is also dependent on initial velocity, the result is an informative correlation between atom position and interferometer phase. Spatially resolved measurements at the interferometer output ports can be used to directly characterize these velocity dependent phase shifts.
In the second aspect, a phase shear is applied to the atom ensemble of an atom interferometer. Spatially resolved measurements at the interferometer output ports can be used to directly characterize changes to the imposed shear due to quantities being measured. Measuring changes to an imposed phase shear can be much more accurate than attempting to make the same measurements with no imposed phase shear. Relative timing of interferometer control pulses and/or application of laser beam tilts during operation of the interferometer are examples that can provide the imposed phase shear.
These aspects can be practiced individually or in any combination. One application of these ideas is to atom interferometric inertial force sensors. For example, multi-axis imaging detection in conjunction with spatially localized atomic sources (and/or an applied phase shear) can be used to directly read-out velocity dependent phase shifts due to rotations, gravity gradients, and optical wavefront distortions. Other applications include, but are not limited to: precision gyrocompassing/attitude determination; compact, high accuracy inertial navigation; and precision optical wavefront metrology.
This approach advantageously allows multi-axis rotation measurement in a simple physical configuration, suitable for portable, fieldable instruments. Such instruments are expected to perform at or exceeding the existing state-of-the art. High accuracy navigation, gravimetric, and wavefront sensors play a central role in many industries, including defense, security, and oil/mineral discovery and management. Sensors based on existing technologies are often too expensive for envisioned applications, or do not support performance requirements. This work can provide sensors with the capacity for unprecedented performance levels and price points.
Practice of the invention does not depend critically on details of the atom optics pulse sequences. For example, pulse sequences designed to emphasize/isolate gravity gradient from rotation responses can be employed. Another alternative is the use of light-field imaging to augment interference fringe read-out.
In the following description, section A describes general principles relating to various embodiments of the invention, section B describes an experimental demonstration of point source interferometry (PSI), and section C describes an experimental demonstration of phase shear readout (PSR).
The interferometer is configured to provide a predetermined baseline fringe pattern at the interferometer ports, and the output signal from the interferometer is obtained by analysis of a measured interference fringe pattern compared to the baseline fringe pattern. Here the baseline fringe pattern can be any fringe pattern that has substantially non-uniform relative phase (i.e., a relative phase variation of 180° or more in the pattern). Although this approach is somewhat more complicated than a conventional interferometer configuration with no baseline fringe pattern (i.e., where the baseline relative phase is uniform or nearly so), it can also provide significant advantages in practice, such as enabling single-shot operation.
There are various ways of providing the baseline fringe pattern.
Preferably, the atom interferometer is configured for single shot operation. This capability is a significant advantage compared to a conventional interferometer where gathering data from multiple shots is often needed to extract the results. The main reason this approach enables single shot operation is that the baseline fringe pattern provides valuable information on interferometer operation (such as actual contrast ratio data) in a single shot that cannot be obtained in single shot data from a conventional interferometer.
This approach is helpful for any application of atom interferometry, including but not limited to: inertial force sensors, gyroscopes, attitude sensors, inertial navigation sensors and systems, gravity sensors, gravity gradient sensors, and optical wave front metrology sensors and systems.
Various geometrical configurations are possible. The example of
Light-pulse atom interferometry enables precision tests of gravity and electrodynamics as well as practical applications in inertial navigation, geodesy, and timekeeping. Phase shifts for light-pulse atom interferometers demonstrate sensitivity to the initial velocity distribution of the atom source, often resulting in inhomogeneous dephasing that washes out fringe contrast. In this section, we show that use of spatially resolved imaging in combination with an initially spatially localized atomic source allows direct characterization of these phase shifts. We refer to this technique as point source interferometry (PSI).
The contrast loss associated with such inhomogeneous dephasing is not fundamental, but is a consequence of atom detection protocols that average over velocity-dependent phase shifts. With PSI we establish a correlation between velocity and position and use spatially-resolved detection to form an image of the ensemble that reveals its velocity-dependent phase structure. A simple way to realize this correlation is through ballistic expansion of the ensemble. In the limit that the ensemble size at detection is much larger than its initial size, each atom's position is approximately proportional to its initial velocity. Consequently, any initial velocity-dependent phase shift results in a spatial variation of the interferometer phase, yielding a position-dependent population difference between the two output ports of the interferometer.
An important example of velocity sensitivity is due to rotation of the interferometer laser beams. Rotation at a rate Ω leads to a phase shift (Table 1, term 2) that depends on (vx, vy), the initial transverse velocity of the atom. In a rotating frame, this effect may be interpreted as a Coriolis acceleration. PSI also allows observation of longitudinal velocity-dependent phase shifts in asymmetric atom interferometers (e.g., Table 1, term 3; in the work of section B, δT=0 μs).
To demonstrate PSI, we induce a velocity-dependent phase shift in a 87Rb Raman light-pulse atom interferometer. We launch cold atoms from the bottom of a 10-meter tall vacuum enclosure (
We imprint a velocity-dependent phase shift by rotating the atom interferometer laser beam axis at a tunable rate δΩ.
The velocity-dependent phase gradient we observe in
To create the cold atomic source, we load 4×109 atoms from a magneto-optical trap into a plugged quadrupole trap, where we evaporate with a microwave knife. A magnetic lensing sequence in a time-orbiting potential (TOP) trap collimates the atom source in 3D, cooling and expanding the cloud while maintaining high phase space density. The procedure is similar in principle to δ-kick cooling, but uses the atoms' continuous expansion over ˜100 ms against a shallow (˜5 Hz) harmonic trap rather than a short (few ms) impulse. The magnetic fields are rapidly turned off when the atoms have reached their minimum velocity (maximum expansion) in all three dimensions. The final cloud contains 4×106 atoms at 50 nK with an initial radius of 200 μm Alternatively, we can produce clouds at 3 nK with 105 atoms and an initial radius of 30 μm by evaporating in a time-orbiting potential trap with a microwave knife prior to the magnetic lensing sequence.
A microwave pulse transfers the ultracold atoms into a magnetically-insensitive Zeeman sublevel. They are then coherently launched with an optical lattice, which transfers 2386 photon momenta with a peak acceleration of 75 g. They enter the interferometer region, a 10 cm diameter, 8.7 m long aluminum vacuum tube. A solenoid wound around the tube provides a bias magnetic field, and three layers of magnetic shielding suppress the environmental field to <1 mG.
A small fraction of the atoms are launched into ±2k momentum states. We purify the ensemble's vertical momentum with a 135 μs Raman π-pulse, which transfers a 25 nK (0.3k) subset of the ensemble into |F=1. A short pulse resonant with |F=2→|F=3 blows away atoms that did not transfer.
A pair of fiber-coupled 1 W tapered amplifiers (TAs) generate the retroreflected interferometer pulses. The seeds for the two TAs are derived from a common source cavity-stabilized to a linewidth of <1 kHz and detuned 1.0 GHz blue from the 780 nm D2 line (|F=2|F′=3). The seed for one TA passes through a fiber phase modulator that generates the 6.8 GHz sideband necessary for Raman interferometry. An acousto-optic modulator (AOM) chirps the other seed to correct for the atoms' Doppler shift. The output of the TAs are combined on a polarizing beamsplitter cube, and the copropagating beams are diffracted by an acousto-optic modulator that acts as a fast optical switch. The beamsplitter and mirror pulses are 35 μs and 70 μs in duration, respectively. The beams have a 2 cm 1/e2 intensity radial waist. The relative power of the two beams is chosen empirically to suppress intensity-dependent detunings by balancing AC Stark shifts (to <2 kHz).
Prior to detection, we spatially separate the output ports by applying a short pulse (˜50 photon recoils) resonant with |F=2→|F′3. We wait 50 ms before simultaneously halting and imaging the atoms with a 2 MHz red-detuned beam. The atoms are nearly at rest after the first 300 μs of the 5 ms imaging time. The scattered light is collected by two orthogonal CCD cameras, each with a numerical aperture of 0.25 (
We precisely control the direction of the interferometer beams with an in-vacuum, piezo-actuated tip-tilt stage onto which the retroreflection mirror is kinematically constrained. The stage has 1 nrad measured precision and a range of 400 μrad. The stage platform is secured kinematically to three nanopositioners (Nano-OP30; Mad City Labs) by stiff springs. The nanopositioners are bolted to the vacuum enclosure, which is anchored to the vibrationally-quiet (10−8 g/√{square root over (Hz)}) concrete floor.
The rotation of the Earth is a significant source of velocity-dependent phase shifts. At our latitude in Stanford, Calif., the effective rate is ΩE=57.9 μrad/s, which induces fringes of periodicity similar to the highest rotation rate in
With PSI, we maintain spatial fringe contrast even in the presence of large net rotation rates (
To compute spatial fringe contrast in
We also measure the rotation rate of the Earth. After coarsely compensating for the Earth's rotation with the tip-tilt stage, we tune the applied rate by adding a small rotation δωE≡ΩC−ωE along the nominal direction of true North (φC≈ΩE+π). We observe the resulting phase gradient simultaneously on CCD1 and CCD2. The magnitude of the observed phase gradient depends on the projection of the net rotation rate onto each camera (see
The difference in the intercepts observed by the two cameras indicates that the rotation compensation direction φC is slightly misaligned from true North φE such that Δφ≡φC−(φE+π)≠0. This results in a spurious rotation (ΔφΩE sin φE){circumflex over (x)} that imprints a phase gradient visible on CCD2 (see Table 1, term 2) independent of δΩE. Likewise, a spurious rotation (−ΔφΩE cos φE)ŷ imprints a phase gradient visible on CCD1. The slopes for the two cameras in
Although the mean interferometer phase is dominated by seismic noise contributions at long T, we can infer an acceleration sensitivity using the observed differential phase noise between different parts of the imaged cloud. Rather than compare the left half versus the right half as we did in the gyroscope analysis, we instead divide the output ports in two using a checkerboard pattern and study the differential phase between the combined even and combined odd grid squares. Varying the grid size s in this analysis reveals correlated phase noise at different spatial scales. To ensure that results are independent of the initial grid registration, we compute two grid alignment quadratures (analogous to sine and cosine) for each dimension by offsetting the grid by s/2 in each direction. We then average over alignment using the root mean square of these four results. Analyzing 280 trials with ωC≈−ωE we find the differential even-odd phase noise is 2.0 mrad per shot for grid sizes from s=3 mm down to 0.7 mm, the smallest size analyzed. Combined with the acceleration response (Table 1, term 1), this implies an acceleration sensitivity of 6.7×10−12 g in one shot. The sensitivity is δa/g=δφ/keffgT2 where δφ=(2.0 mrad)/2 is the absolute phase noise combining all the atoms from both the even and odd grid squares. Since a single trial takes 20 s, this per-shot sensitivity corresponds to 3.0×10−11 g/√{square root over (Hz)}. The acceleration sensitivity of this work is an improvement of more than two orders of magnitude over previous limits. By comparison, the atom shot-noise limit for the 4×106 atoms used in this interferometer at 50% contrast is ˜4×10−12 g in one shot. Note that this grid analysis rejects low spatial frequency variations of the phase across the cloud that originate, for example, from fluctuations in initial kinematics. The results are applicable to measurements where these effects are expected to be common, such as for overlapped ensembles of two species of atoms in an equivalence principle test.
PSI does not require a 10-meter apparatus. A dual-axis gyroscope with shot-noise-limited rotation noise of 100 μdeg/√{square root over (hour)} can be realized with 106 atoms prepared at 3 mK in an interferometer with T=10 ms and 4k atom optics cycling at 25 Hz (with atom recapture).
PSI can measure the interferometer beam optical wavefront in situ. This is desirable in precision atom interferometry applications, including gravitational wave detection. Each atom in an expanding ensemble samples the laser phase at three locations, thereby measuring wavefront aberrations. Term 6 of Table 1 models the interferometer response to a parabolic wavefront curvature of the form kα(x2+y2)/2. Our measured phase noise implies a wavefront sensitivity of α˜(λ/500)/cm2 in one shot.
Finally, PSI allows measurement of multiple components of the gravitational gradient tensor (Table 1, term 5). The sensitivity we report is also sufficient to observe the gravity curvature induced phase shift (Table 1, term 4). Such sensitivity enables precision tests of the equivalence principle and general relativity.
C) Atom Interferometer with Phase Shear
Light-pulse atom interferometers use optical pulses to split, redirect, and interfere freely-falling atoms. They have proven widely useful for precision metrology. Atom interferometers have measured the gravitational and fine-structure constants, are used in on-going laboratory tests of the equivalence principal and general relativity, and have been proposed for use in gravitational wave detection. They have also enabled the realization of high performance gyroscopes, accelerometers, gravimeters, and gravity gradiometers.
Current-generation light-pulse atom interferometers determine phase shifts by recording atomic transition probabilities. These are inferred from the populations of the two atomic states that comprise the interferometer output ports. Due to experimental imperfections, interference contrast is not perfect—the dark port never exhibits complete extinction. It is therefore necessary to independently characterize contrast prior to inferring phase. Typically, this is done with a sequence of multiple shots with different phases, such that the population ratio is scanned through the contrast envelope. Such a protocol relies on the stability of the contrast envelope. In many cases, the contrast varies from shot to shot, introducing additional noise and bias in the phase extraction process.
We present a broadly applicable technique capable of resolving interference phase on a single experimental shot. This is accomplished by introducing a phase shear across the spatial extent of the atom ensemble. The shear is manifest in a spatial variation of the atomic transition probability, which, under appropriate conditions, can be directly observed in an image of the cloud (
PSR fringes reveal rich details about atom interferometer phase shifts and systematic effects, much as spatially varying optical interference patterns yield information about optical systems and their aberrations. The intentional application of a phase shear is analogous to the use of a wedged optical shear plate, where a large applied shear highlights small phase variations across a laser beam.
Here we use beam pointing to introduce shear in a way that is broadly applicable to existing light-pulse interferometer configurations. In particular, this method does not require Bose-Einstein condensed or ultra-cold atomic sources. Moreover, manipulating and measuring the spatial population modulation facilitates measurements of small phase gradients, as we demonstrate by implementing a precise atom interferometric gyrocompass. Finally, we demonstrate arbitrary control over the phase shear axis by combining laser beam pointing and atom-optics pulse timing asymmetry.
The apparatus and methods are similar to those of section B above. Using evaporative cooling followed by a magnetic lens, we obtain a cloud of 4×106 87Rb atoms with a radius of 200 μm and a temperature of 50 nK. At this low density atomic collisions are negligible. These atoms are prepared in the magnetically insensitive |F=2,mF=0 state and launched vertically into an 8.7 m vacuum tube with a chirped optical lattice. They fall back to the bottom after 2.6 s, and we use a vertical fluorescence beam to image them onto two perpendicular CCD cameras (
While the atoms are in free-fall in a magnetically shielded region, we perform light-pulse atom interferometry with a π/2-π-π/2 acceleration-sensitive configuration with a duration of 2T=2.3 s. The atom-optics pulses are applied along the vertical axis using two-photon Raman transitions between the |F=2,mF=0 and |F=1,mF=0 hyperfine ground states (the lasers are detuned 1.0 GHz blue of the |F=2→|F′=3 transition of the D2 line). The atom-optics light is delivered from above and retroreflected off of an in-vacuum piezo-actuated tip-tilt mirror.
The effective wavevector keff of the Raman transitions is determined by the pointing direction of the retroreflection mirror, which is set for each atom-optics pulse with 1 nrad precision. The mirror has three independent piezo actuators in a tripod configuration that allow arbitrary 2-axis tip-tilt control. We compensate for phase shifts arising from Earth's rotation by applying appropriate tilts for each of the three pulses, but additional mirror tilts can be used to induce shear for PSR.
To generate a controlled phase shear, we tilt the piezo-actuated mirror for the final π/2 pulse by an angle δθ with respect to the initial two pulses (in addition to the tilts needed for rotation compensation). In the semi-classical limit, the phase shift for a three-pulse interferometer is ΔΦ=ki·x1−2k2·x2+k3·x3, where ki≡keff,i is the effective propagation vector at the time of the ith pulse and xi is the classical position of the atom. For example, tilting k3 by an additional angle δθ about the x axis yields a phase ΦH=keffδθy3 across the cloud, where y3 is the horizontal position at the third pulse (
where C is the contrast.
Since the retroreflection mirror can be tilted about an arbitrary horizontal axis, beam-tilt PSR can yield fringe patterns with {circumflex over (κ)} anywhere in the xy plane, orthogonal to the laser beam axis (see
The spatial frequency κ of beam-tilt PSR fringes is set by the tilt angle δθ.
We demonstrate single-shot phase readout by implementing a short interferometer sequence (2T=50 ms) near the end of the 2.7 s drift time. In this case, the atom cloud has a large spatial extent for the entire pulse sequence. For each shot, we set the interferometer phase with an acousto-optic modulator and read it back using beam-tilt PSR with δθ=60 μrad.
To show how PSR can enable precision measurements, we implement an atom interferometric gyrocompass in a long interrogation time (2T=2.3 s) configuration. In this case, the Raman laser axis is rotated to compensate Earth's rotation, keeping this axis inertially fixed throughout the interrogation sequence. At the latitude of our lab in Stanford, Calif., this corresponds to an effective rotation rate of ΩE=57.9 μrad/s about an axis along the local true North vector, which is at an angle φE≈15° with respect to the negative x axis (coarsely determined cartographically). However, a small misalignment δφE<<1 between the rotation axis of the retroreflection mirror and true North results in a residual rotation δΩ≈δφEΩE({circumflex over (x)} sin φE−ŷ cos φE) that leads to a Coriolis phase shift ΦC=2keff·(δΩ×v)T2 that varies across the cloud. As before, in the point source limit vy≈y/td, so the Coriolis phase gradient is κC,y≡∂yΦC=2keffT2δφEΩE Sin φE/td. To realize a gyrocompass, we vary the axis of applied rotation by scanning δφE, and identify true North with the angle at which κC,y=0.
It can be challenging to measure small phase gradients with spatial frequencies κ<<1/σ, where σ is the width of the atom ensemble. In this limit, less than one fringe extends across the cloud, so the fringe fitting method in
To circumvent these issues, we take advantage of PSR by applying an additional shear that augments the residual Coriolis shear ΦC. An additional tilt of δθ=±60 μrad about the x axis is added for the final interferometer pulse. This introduces a horizontal shear ΦH with approximately 2.5 fringe periods across the cloud, enough to use fringe fitting to extract the spatial frequency. Subtracting off the known contribution of the additional tilt then yields a measurement of the small residual Coriolis shear. This technique of shifting a small phase gradient to a larger spatial frequency is analogous to a heterodyne measurement in the time domain. In both cases, the heterodyne process circumvents low frequency noise.
Depending on the sign of the tilt angle, the applied shear adds to or subtracts from ΦC. The combined phase gradient is then κ±=keff|δθ|t3/td±KC,y. By alternating the sign of the additional 60 μrad tilt and subtracting the results, we realize a differential measurement whereby systematic uncertainty in the applied shear is mitigated: Δκ≡κ+−κ−=2κC,y, independent of |δθ|.
Finally, we show how combining beam tilts and interferometer timing asymmetries provides arbitrary control over the spatial wavevector κ of the applied phase shear. While a beam tilt applies a shear transverse to the interferometer beam axis, timing asymmetry yields a shear parallel to the beam axis (κ∥κeff) in the point source limit. To create an asymmetric interferometer, we offset the central π pulse by δT/2 such that the time between the first and second pulses (T+δT/2) is different from the time between the second and third pulses (T−δT/2). The resulting phase shift, ΦV=keffvzδT, depends on the atoms' Doppler shift along the direction of keff. The phase shear at detection is then κV=∂zΦV=keffδT/td.
For vertical fringes, the imaging pulse reduces the detected spatial frequency by stretching the cloud vertically. We independently characterize this stretch by measuring the fringe period as a function of imaging duration τ and extrapolating to τ=0. The results indicate a fractional stretch rate of α=0.12 ms−1. The modified prediction for the spatial frequency is {tilde over (κ)}V=κV/(1+ατ). With the τ=2 ms imaging time used, this agrees well with the measurements of
By combining beam tilt shear κH with timing asymmetry shear κV, we can create spatial fringes at arbitrary angles.
The composite shear is at angle Θ=arctan(κV/κH)=arctan [δT/(δθt3)].
We have demonstrated a precision gyrocompass with PSR, but arbitrary control of the shear angle facilitates measurements of phase shifts and gradients from any origin. For example, a vertical gravity gradient Tzz induces a phase shear keffTzzvzT3. This translates the measured angles of
This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional patent application 61/820,637, filed on May 7, 2013, and hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
This invention was made with Government support under contract number N00244-09-1-0063 awarded by the Naval Postgraduate School. The Government has certain rights in this invention.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61820637 | May 2013 | US |