Exploring superradiance for enhanced sensors

Research output: Book/ReportPh.D. thesisResearch

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Exploring superradiance for enhanced sensors. / Bohr, Eliot.

Niels Bohr Institute, Faculty of Science, University of Copenhagen, 2023. 127 p.

Research output: Book/ReportPh.D. thesisResearch

Harvard

Bohr, E 2023, Exploring superradiance for enhanced sensors. Niels Bohr Institute, Faculty of Science, University of Copenhagen.

APA

Bohr, E. (2023). Exploring superradiance for enhanced sensors. Niels Bohr Institute, Faculty of Science, University of Copenhagen.

Vancouver

Bohr E. Exploring superradiance for enhanced sensors. Niels Bohr Institute, Faculty of Science, University of Copenhagen, 2023. 127 p.

Author

Bohr, Eliot. / Exploring superradiance for enhanced sensors. Niels Bohr Institute, Faculty of Science, University of Copenhagen, 2023. 127 p.

Bibtex

@phdthesis{f34ddd2082f84b4592dbd233bc632456,
title = "Exploring superradiance for enhanced sensors",
abstract = "In this thesis, we describe experimental upgrades to the apparatus to investigate superradiance on the kHz intercombination line in ultracold 88-strontium. We present two experimental results which leverage collective effects of atoms within a cavity, applying tools of cavity quantum electrodynamics for advancing atomic clock technology. In our first investigation, we employ superradiant pulses from the cavity mode as a fast and directed atomic population readout. This approach relies on an excitation threshold for superradiant emission, which occurs for a transversely driven atomic ensemble. We experimentally verify this threshold and map out a unique Ramsey spectroscopic lineshape. This lineshape is characterized by its nearzero photon zones where the pump laser detuning results in an excitation below the established threshold. Our technique induces significantly less heating compared to more common fluorescent state readouts. We demonstrate the potential for multiple Ramsey sequences within a single experimental cycle. In our second investigation, we analyze the frequency spectrum of superradiant emission by extending the pulses using an incoherent repumping scheme. By tuning a repump laser{\textquoteright}s frequency, we control and sustain steady state lasing for over a millisecond. This allows us to observe a linewidth of the emitted light that is nearly an order of magnitude narrower than the transition linewidth. Our system operates in what is known as the ”bad cavity” regime, where the phase coherence in the laser is predominantly stored in the atoms rather than in the intracavity light field. Therefore, the emitted light is not only narrow in frequency, but also exhibits reduced sensitivity to cavity mirror vibrations- a prevailing challenge in contemporary atomic clocks.",
author = "Eliot Bohr",
year = "2023",
language = "English",
publisher = "Niels Bohr Institute, Faculty of Science, University of Copenhagen",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Exploring superradiance for enhanced sensors

AU - Bohr, Eliot

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - In this thesis, we describe experimental upgrades to the apparatus to investigate superradiance on the kHz intercombination line in ultracold 88-strontium. We present two experimental results which leverage collective effects of atoms within a cavity, applying tools of cavity quantum electrodynamics for advancing atomic clock technology. In our first investigation, we employ superradiant pulses from the cavity mode as a fast and directed atomic population readout. This approach relies on an excitation threshold for superradiant emission, which occurs for a transversely driven atomic ensemble. We experimentally verify this threshold and map out a unique Ramsey spectroscopic lineshape. This lineshape is characterized by its nearzero photon zones where the pump laser detuning results in an excitation below the established threshold. Our technique induces significantly less heating compared to more common fluorescent state readouts. We demonstrate the potential for multiple Ramsey sequences within a single experimental cycle. In our second investigation, we analyze the frequency spectrum of superradiant emission by extending the pulses using an incoherent repumping scheme. By tuning a repump laser’s frequency, we control and sustain steady state lasing for over a millisecond. This allows us to observe a linewidth of the emitted light that is nearly an order of magnitude narrower than the transition linewidth. Our system operates in what is known as the ”bad cavity” regime, where the phase coherence in the laser is predominantly stored in the atoms rather than in the intracavity light field. Therefore, the emitted light is not only narrow in frequency, but also exhibits reduced sensitivity to cavity mirror vibrations- a prevailing challenge in contemporary atomic clocks.

AB - In this thesis, we describe experimental upgrades to the apparatus to investigate superradiance on the kHz intercombination line in ultracold 88-strontium. We present two experimental results which leverage collective effects of atoms within a cavity, applying tools of cavity quantum electrodynamics for advancing atomic clock technology. In our first investigation, we employ superradiant pulses from the cavity mode as a fast and directed atomic population readout. This approach relies on an excitation threshold for superradiant emission, which occurs for a transversely driven atomic ensemble. We experimentally verify this threshold and map out a unique Ramsey spectroscopic lineshape. This lineshape is characterized by its nearzero photon zones where the pump laser detuning results in an excitation below the established threshold. Our technique induces significantly less heating compared to more common fluorescent state readouts. We demonstrate the potential for multiple Ramsey sequences within a single experimental cycle. In our second investigation, we analyze the frequency spectrum of superradiant emission by extending the pulses using an incoherent repumping scheme. By tuning a repump laser’s frequency, we control and sustain steady state lasing for over a millisecond. This allows us to observe a linewidth of the emitted light that is nearly an order of magnitude narrower than the transition linewidth. Our system operates in what is known as the ”bad cavity” regime, where the phase coherence in the laser is predominantly stored in the atoms rather than in the intracavity light field. Therefore, the emitted light is not only narrow in frequency, but also exhibits reduced sensitivity to cavity mirror vibrations- a prevailing challenge in contemporary atomic clocks.

M3 - Ph.D. thesis

BT - Exploring superradiance for enhanced sensors

PB - Niels Bohr Institute, Faculty of Science, University of Copenhagen

ER -

ID: 379587957