Atomic thermometry in optical lattice clocks
Irene Goti, Tommaso Petrucciani, Stefano Condio, Filippo Levi, Davide Calonico, Marco Pizzocaro

TL;DR
This paper investigates atomic temperature measurement techniques in ytterbium optical lattice clocks, comparing models and cooling methods to improve accuracy and reduce systematic uncertainties at the 10^{-18} level.
Contribution
It introduces clock-line-mediated Sisyphus cooling to lower atomic temperatures and compares harmonic oscillator and Born-Oppenheimer models for more accurate temperature estimation.
Findings
Sisyphus cooling enables operation at shallower lattice depths.
Discrepancies in temperature estimates can reach a factor of two depending on the model.
Model differences impact lattice shift evaluations, affecting clock accuracy.
Abstract
Accurate measurement of atomic temperature is fundamental for a wide range of applications, from quantum sensing to precision metrology. In optical lattice clocks, precise characterization of atomic temperature is required to minimize systematic uncertainties at the level. In this work, we investigate atomic temperature measurements in the ytterbium optical lattice clock developed at INRIM, IT-Yb1, employing sideband and Doppler spectroscopy across a wide range of trapping conditions. By implementing clock-line-mediated Sisyphus cooling [Phys. Rev. Lett. 133, 053401 (2024)], we reduce the atomic temperature and enable operation at shallower lattice depths down to . We compare temperature estimates obtained from the harmonic oscillator model with those derived using a Born-Oppenheimer-based approach [Phys. Rev. A 101, 053416 (2020)], which is expected to provide a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Frequency and Time Standards · Atomic and Subatomic Physics Research · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates
