Critical open-system dynamics in a one-dimensional optical lattice clock
Lo\"ic Henriet, James S. Douglas, Darrick E. Chang, Andreas Albrecht

TL;DR
This paper studies how dipole-dipole interactions in a 1D optical lattice clock lead to critical open-system dynamics, subradiance, and non-exponential decay, revealing complex many-body effects that influence clock stability.
Contribution
It demonstrates that atomic interactions induce critical dynamics and subradiance in a 1D optical lattice clock, highlighting effects beyond mean-field approximations.
Findings
Dipole-dipole interactions cause subradiance and slow power-law decay.
Excitations exhibit fermionic correlations at long times.
Long-time frequency shift is dominated by subradiant state interactions.
Abstract
There have been concerted efforts in recent years to realize the next generation of clocks using alkaline earth atoms in an optical lattice. Assuming that the atoms are independent, such a clock would benefit from a enhancement in its stability, associated with the improved signal-to-noise ratio of a large atom number . An interesting question, however, is what type of atomic interactions might affect the clock dynamics, and whether these interactions are deleterious or could even be beneficial. In this work, we investigate the effect of dipole-dipole interactions, in which atoms excited during the clock protocol emit and re-absorb photons. Taking a simple system consisting of a 1D atomic array, we find that dipole-dipole interactions in fact result in an open quantum system exhibiting critical dynamics, as a set of collective excitations acquires a decay rate approaching…
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