• Chinese Optics Letters
  • Vol. 15, Issue 4, 040201 (2017)
Gongxun Dong1、2, Jianliao Deng1、*, Jinda Lin1、**, Song Zhang1, Haixiao Lin1、2, and Yuzhu Wang1
Author Affiliations
  • 1Key Laboratory of Quantum Optics, and Center for Cold Atom Physics, Shanghai Institute of Optics and Fine Mechanics (SIOM), Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai 201800, China
  • 2University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China
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    DOI: 10.3788/COL201715.040201 Cite this Article Set citation alerts
    Gongxun Dong, Jianliao Deng, Jinda Lin, Song Zhang, Haixiao Lin, Yuzhu Wang. Recent improvements on the pulsed optically pumped rubidium clock at SIOM[J]. Chinese Optics Letters, 2017, 15(4): 040201 Copy Citation Text show less
    (a) Schematic setup of the POP clock with dispersive detection. PD, photodetector. (b) Timing sequence for the POP clock. Top red, optical pulses for state preparation and detection; middle blue, two microwave pulses for Ramsey interrogation; bottom yellow, trigger pulse for signal acquisition. These pulses correspond to the switches in different colors in (a). (c) Detailed energy level structure of Rb87 involved in the POP clock. The π transition between |52S1/2,F=1,mF=0〉 and |52S1/2,F=2,mF=0〉 is chosen as the clock transition with a frequency of about 6.8346 GHz.
    Fig. 1. (a) Schematic setup of the POP clock with dispersive detection. PD, photodetector. (b) Timing sequence for the POP clock. Top red, optical pulses for state preparation and detection; middle blue, two microwave pulses for Ramsey interrogation; bottom yellow, trigger pulse for signal acquisition. These pulses correspond to the switches in different colors in (a). (c) Detailed energy level structure of Rb87 involved in the POP clock. The π transition between |52S1/2,F=1,mF=0 and |52S1/2,F=2,mF=0 is chosen as the clock transition with a frequency of about 6.8346 GHz.
    (a) Schematic of the new physics package. The cell filled with Rb87 and buffer gases has a size of ϕ20×20 mm fixed in a TE011 microwave cavity resonant at 6.8 GHz. The size of the physics package is about ϕ130×170 mm with a volume of about 2.2 L. (b) Microwave–light double resonance signal. The three peaks correspond to the π transitions (ΔmF=0) between hyperfine levels of Rb87. (c) Ramsey oscillating signal. We fixed the microwave frequency on the clock transition frequency and measured the Ramsey signal by changing the microwave power. (d) Ramsey fringe measured with the new physics package. The fringe has a contrast of about 97%, an SNR of about 2400, and a line width of about 140 Hz.
    Fig. 2. (a) Schematic of the new physics package. The cell filled with Rb87 and buffer gases has a size of ϕ20×20mm fixed in a TE011 microwave cavity resonant at 6.8 GHz. The size of the physics package is about ϕ130×170mm with a volume of about 2.2 L. (b) Microwave–light double resonance signal. The three peaks correspond to the π transitions (ΔmF=0) between hyperfine levels of Rb87. (c) Ramsey oscillating signal. We fixed the microwave frequency on the clock transition frequency and measured the Ramsey signal by changing the microwave power. (d) Ramsey fringe measured with the new physics package. The fringe has a contrast of about 97%, an SNR of about 2400, and a line width of about 140 Hz.
    (a) Fractional frequency under different temperatures. Black square, experimental data; red curve, fit line. (b) Temperature stability in terms of the Allan deviation and the Hadamard deviation under different average times.
    Fig. 3. (a) Fractional frequency under different temperatures. Black square, experimental data; red curve, fit line. (b) Temperature stability in terms of the Allan deviation and the Hadamard deviation under different average times.
    Frequency stability of the POP clock compared with the H maser. A drift of about −4.5×10−13/day is removed from the data. A clock frequency stability of 3.53×10−13 at 1 s is obtained, and the medium-term fractional frequency stability of 4.91×10−15 is achieved at an averaging time of τ=2000 s.
    Fig. 4. Frequency stability of the POP clock compared with the H maser. A drift of about 4.5×1013/day is removed from the data. A clock frequency stability of 3.53×1013 at 1 s is obtained, and the medium-term fractional frequency stability of 4.91×1015 is achieved at an averaging time of τ=2000s.
    Gongxun Dong, Jianliao Deng, Jinda Lin, Song Zhang, Haixiao Lin, Yuzhu Wang. Recent improvements on the pulsed optically pumped rubidium clock at SIOM[J]. Chinese Optics Letters, 2017, 15(4): 040201
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