The present disclosure relates to atom interferometers.
Since their first demonstrations, atom interferometers (Als) have become a powerful tool with a broad range of applications in tests of fundamental physics, precision measurements, and applied sciences. A challenge in atom interferometer design is to achieve a high degree of sensitivity with respect to the measured quantity (e.g., an acceleration) while minimizing geometrical footprint of the apparatus and maximizing readout bandwidth to allow for practical applications. Previous work on atom interferometers includes free-space and point-source AI experiments, as well as guided-wave AI experiments and proposals. Free-space and point-source AIs typically employ atomic fountains or dropped atom clouds. The point-source method supports efficient readout and data reduction, enables high bandwidth, and affords efficiency in the partial-fringe regime. Atomic fountains typically employed in free-space atom interferomters maximize interferometric time and hence increase sensitivity but require large experimental setups. Guided-wave AIs offer compactness and are often used as Sagnac rotation sensors but are susceptible to noise in the guiding potentials. In both free-space and guided-wave AI, wave-packet dynamics along unconfined degrees of freedom can cause wave-packet dispersion and failure to close, i.e., the split wave packets may fail to recombine in space-time. Coherent recombination of split atomic wave functions upon their preparation and time evolution remains challenging in recent atom interferometer studies.
In this disclosure, a technique is proposed in which there are no unconfined degrees of freedom of the center-of-mass (COM) motion in the atom interferometer. The method relies on confining, splitting, transporting, and recombining atomic COM quantum states in three-dimensional (3D) quantum wells that move along user-programmed paths. This approach is referred to herein as “tractor atom interferometer” (TAI). Proper tractor path control ensures closure of the interferometer, and tight 3D confinement at all times during the AI loop suppresses coherence loss due to wave-packet dispersion.
This section provides background information related to the present disclosure which is not necessarily prior art.
This section provides a general summary of the disclosure, and is not a comprehensive disclosure of its full scope or all of its features.
In one aspect, a method is presented for measuring motion of a moving body using an atom interferometer. The method includes: positioning at least one atom in a cavity of the atom interferometer, where the atom interferometer is attached to the moving body; splitting the at least one atom into a pair of wave-function components; guiding the pair of wave-function components along respective paths in the cavity such that the pair of wave-function components are confined spatially along the respective paths in all degrees of freedom and without interruption; coherently recombining the pair of wave-function components into the at least one atom; and measuring a property of the at least one atom after the pair of wave-function components have been recombined into the at least one atom, where the property of the at least one atom is indicative of motion of the moving body.
Further areas of applicability will become apparent from the description provided herein. The description and specific examples in this summary are intended for purposes of illustration only and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure.
The drawings described herein are for illustrative purposes only of selected embodiments and not all possible implementations, and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure.
Corresponding reference numerals indicate corresponding parts throughout the several views of the drawings.
Example embodiments will now be described more fully with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The quantum state of a single atom in the COM and spin product state space is
with COM components |ψi(t)〉 in a number of spin states imax. For simplicity, assume that all elements of the spin-state basis {|i〉 } are position and time independent, and that the x and y degrees of freedom of the COM are frozen out. Denoting ψi (z, t) = (z|ψi (t)〉, the time-dependent Schrödinger equation becomes
with i = 1, ..., imax, particle mass m, COM potentials Ui(z,t) that may depend on spin, and couplings Ωij(z, t) between the spin states.
In the examples below, consider a scalar case, in which imax = 1, and a spinor case with imax = 2. In the scalar case, the tractor traps of the atom interferometer are all contained in a single potential U1(z, t) for a scalar wave function ψ1(z,t) (and there are no couplings Ωij). In the spinor case, the spin space can be viewed as that of a spin-½ particle with spin states {|↑〉,|↓〉}. The spin states could, for instance, represent two magnetic sublevels of the F = 1 and F = 2 hyperfine ground states of 87Rb. In spinor TAI, the spin states have distinct potentials, U↑(z,t)and U↓(z,t), with spin-specific potential wells, and the spinor wave-function components are coupled via Ω↓↑ = Ω↑↓.
Numerically solve equation (2) using the Crank-Nicolson (CN) method. In this example, 87Rb atoms are used in wells ∼ 20 µm wide and ∼ h X 1 MHz deep. A time-step size of Δt = 10 ns and a spatial grid step size of Δz = 10 nm is used. For the spinor simulations, the Crank-Nicolson is generalized to cover problems with imax > 1.
In this scalar implementation, the tractor paths, zI/II (t), differ significantly from the tractor control functions, +tz0(t), during the well separation and recombination phases, while they are essentially the same when the minima are separated by more than the width of the wells (compare solid and dashed lines in
Atom interferometer closure is guaranteed by virtue of proper tractor control. This is evident in the simulated wave-function plots included in
Due to uninterrupted 3D confinement, TAI eliminates free-particle wave-packet dispersion. There is, however, a possibility of nonadiabatic transitions into excited COM states during the wave-function splitting and recombination, which would reduce the interferometer’s contrast and introduce spurious signals. To show that under conditions, such as in
The scalar scheme above serves well to describe the TAI concept. At the splitting, the initial COM state is supposed to evolve into the even-parity superposition of the ground states in the split wells,
without populating the odd-parity superposition and other excited COM states. However, under conditions that are less ideal, scalar TAI is prone to nonadiabatic excitation of unwanted COM states at the times when the wells split and recombine. The splitting and, similarly, the recombination are fragile because the potential is very soft at the splitting and recombination times, and nonadiabatic mixing can easily occur.
The fragility of scalar TAI is avoided in a second, improved method that operates on a two-component spinor system [imax = 2 in Eqs. (1) and (2)] with a pair of spin-dependent potentials. The atomic wave function is initially prepared in the COM ground state
of a spin-down tractor potential [inset (A) in
In the absence of nonadiabatic transitions into excited COM states in the spin-dependent potentials, the final state is of the form |Ψ〉 = c ↓|Φ v0, ↓ > + c ↑ | ϕ v0, ↑ >. The Al phase ΔϕQ is encoded in the final populations in the two spin states [inset (E) in
In experimental implementations, the |c↓|2 and |c↑|2 can be measured, for instance, via state-dependent fluorescence to yield
Similar to the scalar case, wave-function simulations were performed for a set of accelerations α along the z direction, which add identical gravitational potentials Ug = m a z to both spin-dependent potentials. From the simulated spinor wave functions, extract c↑ and c↓, compute sin2(ΔϕQ/2) according to equation (4), and plot the results in
Using the path-integral formalism, the semiclassical phase of an Al loop, ΔϕS, in one dimension is
where Δϕ is in rads, LII/I are the Lagrange functions on the paths zI/II(t) of the centroids of the split atomic wave-function components, and ta and tb are the splitting and recombination times.
A key feature that distinguishes TAI from other atom interferometers is that the paths zI/II(t) are predetermined by the system controls and therefore do not have to be computed prior to using equation (5). Simultaneous arrival of the split wave-function components at the recombination point is achieved by proper programming of the tractor paths.
The guaranteed closure of TAI in space-time is related to the fact that the number of generalized Lagrangian coordinates in TAI is zero. Other atom interferometers typically have at least one generalized coordinate along which the classical motion is unconstrained and along which quantum wave packets may disperse. The atom interferometer can then, in principle, fail to achieve closure due to a difference in classical propagation times along the Al paths between splitting and recombination. A propagation time difference can be caused by uncontrollable conditions, such as an erratic background acceleration. In TAI, closure is guaranteed by virtue of uninterrupted 3D control of the interferometric paths and suitable tractor programming.
In these examples, tractor paths are considered in which the kinetic energy terms in LII/I are equal, i.e., zII(t) = -zI(t), and have added a gravitational potential Ug = maz. In that case, equation (5) simplifies to
with a parameter
that only depends on the programmed tractor paths zI(t) and zII(t). Note there is no atom dynamics to be solved for. The zI(t) and zII(t) are either identical with the tractor control functions z0,∗(t) themselves (spinor case), or they are found by solving an equation of the type (∂/∂z)U1(z,t) = 0 (scalar case).
The semiclassical phases ΔΦS are compared with the quantum phases ΔϕQ over a range of accelerations, a. The ΔϕS(a) that follow from equations (5)-(7) after utilization of the appropriate tractor paths zI(t) and zII(t) are shown in
The scalar and spinor implementations simulated and described above exhibit similar sensitivities to the acceleration a. The sensitivities are not the same because the cases happen to have slightly different Al areas (shaded regions in
A reduction of the grid spacing Δz in the simulation does not noticeably affect the accuracy of the results; whereas, a reduction of the time-step size Δt does improve the agreement of ΔϕS with ΔϕQ. Therefore the minor differences between quantum and semiclassical phases [too small to be seen in
Scalar TAI generally is more susceptible to nonadiabatic COM excitations in the splitters and recombiners than spinor TAI, necessitating longer splitter- and recombiner durations with reduced slopes near the critical time points when the single well splits into two and vice versa (see
To quantify the nonadiabaticity in both TAI cases, a series of simulations of splitting sequences with smooth tractor control functions z0(t) = 50 µm x sin2 [πt/(2T)] (as in
of the splitter acceleration |0| for both TAI cases. The wave-function densities in the inset visualize the contrast between adiabatic [inset (A), no COM excitation] and nonadiabatic splitting [inset (B), substantial COM excitation]. The results underscore that for scalar TAI it is crucial to reduce the slope |ż0| at the times when the wells split and recombine. For the control-function type used in
For Sagnac rotation interferometry, the tractor paths can be programmed to circumscribe a nonzero geometric area A, and the paths can be traversed N times between splitting and recombination. For a sensitivity estimate for the angular rotation rate Ω, assume TAI loop parameters of A = 1 cm2 and N = 300, which seems feasible. For rubidium it then is Δϕ/Ω ∼ mA/ħ ≈ 4 × 107 rad/(rad/s). Assuming a phase resolution Δϕ = 2π/100, the rotation sensitivity would be ~1 nrad/s.
During the measurement process, the at least one atom is split into a pair of wave-function components at 52 by a beam splitter, for example using microwave pulses. The pair of wave-function components are then guided at 53 along respective paths in the cavity such that the pair of wave-function components are confined spatially along the respective paths in all degrees of freedom and without interruption. In one example, the wave-function components are moved by shifting phase of at least two laser beams injected into the cavity, thereby enabling programmed position control of the optical potential trap. The pair of wave-function components are coherently recombined at 54 to reform the at least one atom. The pair of wave-function components can be recombined by moving the wave-function components into overlapping positions and hitting them with microwave pulses.
After the pair of wave-function components have been recombined, a property of the reformed atom is measured at 55, where the property of the atom is indicative of motion of the moving body. In one example, the spin states of the atom can be measured and used to calculate the acceleration or rotation of the moving body. Different techniques for measuring an atom property and calculating a metric indicative of the motion of the moving body are known and contemplated for use by this disclosure.
In one example, optical lattices are formed in the cavity with a resonant field modes, thereby providing an optical lattice for each of the basis spin states of the atom. Although not limited to two, two atomic spin states are locked to a pair of distinct clockwise and counter-clockwise cavity modes with frequencies differing by an amount in the RF regime (e.g., MHz to 10 GHz) matched to the atomic spin states with each of the modes pumped by its own pair of lasers. The positions of the lattice sites of the counter-clockwise and clockwise propagating cavity modes along the cavity optical axis are controlled by differential phase or frequency control of the respective laser beam pairs pumping the modes, using combinations of electro-optic modulators and spatial light modulators.
With reference to
In one example, two optical lattices for the two atomic spin states are locked to a pair of bidirectional cavity modes with frequencies differing by an amount in the RF regime (e.g., MHz to 10 GHz) matched to the atomic spin states, with each of the modes pumped by a respective pair of laser beams. The position of the lattice sites along the cavity optical axis is fixed, while the lattice sites of the two spin-specific cavity modes are counter-rotated on planes transverse to the optical axis of the cavity by a differential angle of an integer times 2 π, controlled by rotating the mode-matching patterns of the pump beams in counter-rotating, clockwise and counter-clockwise, fashions using spatial light modulators and electro-optic components.
With reference to
The foregoing description of the embodiments has been provided for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the disclosure. Individual elements or features of a particular embodiment are generally not limited to that particular embodiment, but, where applicable, are interchangeable and can be used in a selected embodiment, even if not specifically shown or described. The same may also be varied in many ways. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the disclosure, and all such modifications are intended to be included within the scope of the disclosure.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 63/235,209, filed on Aug. 20, 2021. The entire disclosure of the above application is incorporated herein by reference.
This invention was made with government support under PHYS1806809 awarded by the National Science Foundation and under NNN12AA01C awarded by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The government has certain rights in the invention.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63235209 | Aug 2021 | US |