Techniques for Inertial Sensing Using Atomic Matter Wave Lattices

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Gehrig Michael Isaac Carlse

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Abstract

This dissertation describes the development of a suite of interlinked techniques for precision metrology with matter wave lattices realized in a ceiling-to-floor non-magnetic atom trapping apparatus.

This work involves the development of a single-state atom interferometer that relies on the observation of density gratings formed in the atomic ground state of a laser-cooled sample. These gratings, the result of Kapitza-Dirac diffraction of momentum states following a standing wave optical excitation pulse, typically dephase according to their velocity distribution, and motional properties of the sample, including the local value of gravitational acceleration g, are imprinted on the grating contrast and phase. These features can be extracted by coherently backscattering a travelling wave readout field applied within the thermal coherence time of the sample and measuring the grating free-induction decay.

Alternatively, a grating echo, resulting from the application of two standing wave pulses separated by t=T_{21}, can be detected using the same backscattering method in the vicinity of the echo time t=2T_{21} on time scales defined by the transit of cold atoms out of the standing wave beam volume.

This dissertation presents five main experimental results that impact a new generation of cold atom quantum sensors. Firstly, we investigate a technique for measuring the magnetic moments and sublevel distributions of laser-cooled gases. Secondly, we study optical channell-ing which can be used to increase the scattering efficiency of optical lattices and the sensitivity of grating-echo interferometers. Thirdly, we describe Bragg scattering of a readout pulse from optical lattices and develop a technique to optimize this process in dilute gas lattices, leading to increased signal strengths in echo interferometers. Fourthly, we demonstrate a novel "Ramsey" velocimeter which can measure sample center-of-mass velocity with a precision of 600 µm/s. Finally, we present a measurement of g which represents the first realization of a frequency domain echo-type gravimeter, with a sensitivity to g of 2 parts per million. We outline the basis for improving the precision of these sensors to realize devices capable of measuring g with a sensitivity of 10 parts per billion and probing velocities more precisely than all other atomic velocimeters.

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Atomic physics, Physics

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