Atomic interferometer based on optical tweezers
Jonathan Nemirovsky, Rafi Weill, Ilan Meltzer, and Yoav Sagi

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel atomic interferometer using optical tweezers that enables precise control, long measurement times, and multi-atom capabilities, surpassing limitations of traditional methods.
Contribution
The paper proposes and analyzes a new interferometry scheme with optical tweezers, allowing flexible atomic trajectories, multi-atom operation, and high precision measurements.
Findings
Achieves relative accuracy better than 10^{-11} in gravity measurement.
Demonstrates robustness of adiabatic schemes to experimental imperfections.
Enables multi-atom interferometry and single-atom state control.
Abstract
Atomic interferometers measure forces and acceleration with exceptional precision. The conventional approach to atomic interferometry is to launch an atomic cloud into a ballistic trajectory and perform the wave-packet splitting in momentum space by Raman transitions. This places severe constraints on the possible atomic trajectory, positioning accuracy and probing duration. Here, we propose and analyze a novel atomic interferometer that uses micro-optical traps (optical tweezers) to manipulate and control the motion of atoms. The new interferometer allows long probing time, sub micrometer positioning accuracy, and utmost flexibility in shaping of the atomic trajectory. The cornerstone of the tweezer interferometer are the coherent atomic splitting and combining schemes. We present two adiabatic schemes with two or three tweezers that are robust to experimental imperfections and work…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Quantum optics and atomic interactions · Atomic and Subatomic Physics Research
