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Towards a Transportable Aluminium Ion Quantum Logic Optical Clock

Published 8 Jan 2019 in physics.atom-ph | (1901.02250v2)

Abstract: With the advent of optical clocks featuring fractional frequency uncertainties on the order of $10{-17}$ and below, new applications such as chronometric levelling with few-cm height resolution emerge. We are developing a transportable optical clock based on a single trapped aluminium ion, which is interrogated via quantum logic spectroscopy. We employ singly-charged calcium as the logic ion for sympathetic cooling, state preparation and readout. Here we present a simple and compact physics and laser package for manipulation of ${40}\mathrm{Ca}+$. Important features are a segmented multi-layer trap with separate loading and probing zones, a compact titanium vacuum chamber, a near-diffraction-limited imaging system with high numerical aperture based on a single biaspheric lens, and an all-in-fiber ${40}\mathrm{Ca}+$ repump laser system. We present preliminary estimates of the trap-induced frequency shifts on ${27}\mathrm{Al}+$, derived from measurements with a single calcium ion. The micromotion-induced second-order Doppler shift for ${27}\mathrm{Al}+$ has been determined to be \sods and the black-body radiation shift is $\delta\nu_\mathrm{BBR}/\nu=(-4.0\pm0.4)\times10{-18}$. Moreover, heating rates of 30 (7) quanta per second at trap frequencies of $\omega_\mathrm{rad,Ca+} \approx2\pi\times2.5\,\mathrm{MHz}$ ($\omega_\mathrm{ax,Ca+} \approx2\pi\times1.5\,\mathrm{MHz}$) in radial (axial) direction have been measured, enabling interrogation times of a few hundreds of milliseconds.

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