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Generalized Autobalanced Ramsey Spectroscopy of Clock Transitions. / Yudin, V. I.; Taichenachev, A. V.; Basalaev, M. Yu et al.

In: Physical Review Applied, Vol. 9, No. 5, 054034, 23.05.2018.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Yudin, VI, Taichenachev, AV, Basalaev, MY, Zanon-Willette, T, Pollock, JW, Shuker, M, Donley, EA & Kitching, J 2018, 'Generalized Autobalanced Ramsey Spectroscopy of Clock Transitions', Physical Review Applied, vol. 9, no. 5, 054034. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevApplied.9.054034

APA

Yudin, V. I., Taichenachev, A. V., Basalaev, M. Y., Zanon-Willette, T., Pollock, J. W., Shuker, M., Donley, E. A., & Kitching, J. (2018). Generalized Autobalanced Ramsey Spectroscopy of Clock Transitions. Physical Review Applied, 9(5), [054034]. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevApplied.9.054034

Vancouver

Yudin VI, Taichenachev AV, Basalaev MY, Zanon-Willette T, Pollock JW, Shuker M et al. Generalized Autobalanced Ramsey Spectroscopy of Clock Transitions. Physical Review Applied. 2018 May 23;9(5):054034. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevApplied.9.054034

Author

Yudin, V. I. ; Taichenachev, A. V. ; Basalaev, M. Yu et al. / Generalized Autobalanced Ramsey Spectroscopy of Clock Transitions. In: Physical Review Applied. 2018 ; Vol. 9, No. 5.

BibTeX

@article{65004a3ca1354926abdf86c3e89b5b45,
title = "Generalized Autobalanced Ramsey Spectroscopy of Clock Transitions",
abstract = "When performing precision measurements, the quantity being measured is often perturbed by the measurement process itself. Such measurements include precision frequency measurements for atomic clock applications carried out with Ramsey spectroscopy. With the aim of eliminating probe-induced perturbations, a method of generalized autobalanced Ramsey spectroscopy (GABRS) is presented and rigorously substantiated. The usual local-oscillator frequency control loop is augmented with a second control loop derived from secondary Ramsey sequences interspersed with the primary sequences and with a different Ramsey period. This second loop feeds back to a secondary clock variable and ultimately compensates for the perturbation of the clock frequency caused by the measurements in the first loop. We show that such a two-loop scheme can lead to perfect compensation for measurement-induced light shifts and does not suffer from the effects of relaxation, time-dependent pulse fluctuations and phase-jump modulation errors that are typical of other hyper-Ramsey schemes. Several variants of GABRS are explored based on different secondary variables including added relative phase shifts between Ramsey pulses, external frequency-step compensation, and variable second-pulse duration. We demonstrate that a universal antisymmetric error signal, and hence perfect compensation at a finite modulation amplitude, is generated only if an additional frequency step applied during both Ramsey pulses is used as the concomitant variable parameter. This universal technique can be applied to the fields of atomic clocks, high-resolution molecular spectroscopy, magnetically induced and two-photon probing schemes, Ramsey-type mass spectrometry, and the field of precision measurements. Some variants of GABRS can also be applied for rf atomic clocks using coherent-population-trapping-based Ramsey spectroscopy of the two-photon dark resonance.",
keywords = "FREQUENCY, SHIFTS",
author = "Yudin, {V. I.} and Taichenachev, {A. V.} and Basalaev, {M. Yu} and T. Zanon-Willette and Pollock, {J. W.} and M. Shuker and Donley, {E. A.} and J. Kitching",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2018 American Physical Society.",
year = "2018",
month = may,
day = "23",
doi = "10.1103/PhysRevApplied.9.054034",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
journal = "Physical Review Applied",
issn = "2331-7019",
publisher = "American Physical Society",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Generalized Autobalanced Ramsey Spectroscopy of Clock Transitions

AU - Yudin, V. I.

AU - Taichenachev, A. V.

AU - Basalaev, M. Yu

AU - Zanon-Willette, T.

AU - Pollock, J. W.

AU - Shuker, M.

AU - Donley, E. A.

AU - Kitching, J.

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2018 American Physical Society.

PY - 2018/5/23

Y1 - 2018/5/23

N2 - When performing precision measurements, the quantity being measured is often perturbed by the measurement process itself. Such measurements include precision frequency measurements for atomic clock applications carried out with Ramsey spectroscopy. With the aim of eliminating probe-induced perturbations, a method of generalized autobalanced Ramsey spectroscopy (GABRS) is presented and rigorously substantiated. The usual local-oscillator frequency control loop is augmented with a second control loop derived from secondary Ramsey sequences interspersed with the primary sequences and with a different Ramsey period. This second loop feeds back to a secondary clock variable and ultimately compensates for the perturbation of the clock frequency caused by the measurements in the first loop. We show that such a two-loop scheme can lead to perfect compensation for measurement-induced light shifts and does not suffer from the effects of relaxation, time-dependent pulse fluctuations and phase-jump modulation errors that are typical of other hyper-Ramsey schemes. Several variants of GABRS are explored based on different secondary variables including added relative phase shifts between Ramsey pulses, external frequency-step compensation, and variable second-pulse duration. We demonstrate that a universal antisymmetric error signal, and hence perfect compensation at a finite modulation amplitude, is generated only if an additional frequency step applied during both Ramsey pulses is used as the concomitant variable parameter. This universal technique can be applied to the fields of atomic clocks, high-resolution molecular spectroscopy, magnetically induced and two-photon probing schemes, Ramsey-type mass spectrometry, and the field of precision measurements. Some variants of GABRS can also be applied for rf atomic clocks using coherent-population-trapping-based Ramsey spectroscopy of the two-photon dark resonance.

AB - When performing precision measurements, the quantity being measured is often perturbed by the measurement process itself. Such measurements include precision frequency measurements for atomic clock applications carried out with Ramsey spectroscopy. With the aim of eliminating probe-induced perturbations, a method of generalized autobalanced Ramsey spectroscopy (GABRS) is presented and rigorously substantiated. The usual local-oscillator frequency control loop is augmented with a second control loop derived from secondary Ramsey sequences interspersed with the primary sequences and with a different Ramsey period. This second loop feeds back to a secondary clock variable and ultimately compensates for the perturbation of the clock frequency caused by the measurements in the first loop. We show that such a two-loop scheme can lead to perfect compensation for measurement-induced light shifts and does not suffer from the effects of relaxation, time-dependent pulse fluctuations and phase-jump modulation errors that are typical of other hyper-Ramsey schemes. Several variants of GABRS are explored based on different secondary variables including added relative phase shifts between Ramsey pulses, external frequency-step compensation, and variable second-pulse duration. We demonstrate that a universal antisymmetric error signal, and hence perfect compensation at a finite modulation amplitude, is generated only if an additional frequency step applied during both Ramsey pulses is used as the concomitant variable parameter. This universal technique can be applied to the fields of atomic clocks, high-resolution molecular spectroscopy, magnetically induced and two-photon probing schemes, Ramsey-type mass spectrometry, and the field of precision measurements. Some variants of GABRS can also be applied for rf atomic clocks using coherent-population-trapping-based Ramsey spectroscopy of the two-photon dark resonance.

KW - FREQUENCY

KW - SHIFTS

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85047740441&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1103/PhysRevApplied.9.054034

DO - 10.1103/PhysRevApplied.9.054034

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85047740441

VL - 9

JO - Physical Review Applied

JF - Physical Review Applied

SN - 2331-7019

IS - 5

M1 - 054034

ER -

ID: 13668298