# A Fermi-degenerate three-dimensional optical lattice clock

**Authors:** S.L. Campbell, R.B. Hutson, G.E. Marti, A. Goban, N. Darkwah Oppong,, R.L. McNally, L. Sonderhouse, J.M. Robinson, W. Zhang, B.J. Bloom, J. Ye

arXiv: 1702.01210 · 2017-11-30

## TL;DR

This paper presents a scalable 3D optical lattice clock using a degenerate Fermi gas of strontium atoms, achieving high precision by mitigating density-dependent interaction shifts.

## Contribution

It introduces a method to suppress on-site interaction shifts in a 3D lattice clock using a degenerate Fermi gas, enhancing both stability and accuracy.

## Key findings

- Achieved a measurement precision of 5×10⁻¹⁹ in 1 hour.
- Resolved contact interactions to reduce clock shifts.
- Demonstrated a scalable approach for high-precision atomic clocks.

## Abstract

Strontium optical lattice clocks have the potential to simultaneously interrogate millions of atoms with a high spectroscopic quality factor of $4 \times 10^{-17}$. Previously, atomic interactions have forced a compromise between clock stability, which benefits from a large atom number, and accuracy, which suffers from density-dependent frequency shifts. Here, we demonstrate a scalable solution which takes advantage of the high, correlated density of a degenerate Fermi gas in a three-dimensional optical lattice to guard against on-site interaction shifts. We show that contact interactions are resolved so that their contribution to clock shifts is orders of magnitude lower than in previous experiments. A synchronous clock comparison between two regions of the 3D lattice yields a $5 \times 10^{-19}$ measurement precision in 1 hour of averaging time.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1702.01210