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Gravitational Physics with Atom Interferometry Prof. Mark Kasevich Dept. of Physics and Applied Physics Stanford University, Stanford CA Atom interferometric inertial sensors Pulses of light are used to coherently manipulated the centerof-mass motion of atomic wavepackets Phase shifts: Semi-classical approximation Three contributions to interferometer phase shift: Propagation shift: Laser fields (Raman interaction): Wavepacket separation at detection: See Bongs, et al., quant-ph/0204102 (2002), also App. Phys. B, 2006. Gyroscope, Measurement of Earth rotation rate F=4 Interior view F=3 Gyroscope output vs.orientation. 200 mdeg/hr1/2 Gravimeter, Measurement of g Fabricated and tested at AOSense, Inc., Sunnyvale, CA. Sensors designed for precision navigation. AOSense, Inc. DARPA DSO 5 Gyroscope mode/Rotational Seismology Honduras/offshore 7.3 +30 min Gyroscope output necessary to disambiguate tilt from horizontal motion (navigation problem). AOSense, Inc. DARPA DSO 6 Differential accelerometer ~1m Applications in precision navigation and geodesy Gravity gradiometer Demonstrated accelerometer resolution: ~10-11 g. Test Newton’s Inverse Square Law Using new sensors, we anticipate dG/G ~ 10-5. This will also test for deviations from the inverse square law at distances from l ~ 1 mm to 10 cm. Theory in collaboration with S. Dimopoulos, P. Graham, J. Wacker. Equivalence Principle Co-falling 85Rb and 87Rb ensembles Evaporatively cool to < 1 mK to enforce tight control over kinematic degrees of freedom Statistical sensitivity dg ~ 10-15 g with 1 month data collection Systematic uncertainty dg ~ 10-16 limited by magnetic field inhomogeneities and gravity anomalies. 10 m drop tower Error Model Use standard methods to analyze spurious phase shifts from uncontrolled: • Rotations • Gravity anomalies/gradients • Magnetic fields • Proof-mass overlap • Misalignments • Finite pulse effects Known systematic effects appear controllable at the dg ~ 10-16 g level. (Hogan, Johnson, Proc. Enrico Fermi, 2007) Earth rotation compensation Earth rotation induces systematic phase shift which needs to be compensated. Strategy is to keep atom-optics axis inertially stabilized over interferometer pulse sequence duration (~ 2.8 s). Required 1 nrad angular stability in beamsteering axis achieved by controlling orientation of retro-reflecting mirror. Top view of mirror Angle pick-off: Optical lever + Sagnac interferometer for precision angle measurement ~ 1 prad/Hz1/2 performance achieved Related work: Howell, PRL 102, 173601 (2009); Howell, Phys. Rev. A 81, 033813 (2010). Magnetic shields Shields at annealing facility Magnetic shielding specifications require jointfree shields over 10 m. Achieved 100 mG axial uniformity over 10 m. General Relativity/Phase shifts Light-pulse interferometer phase shifts in GR: • Geodesic propagation for atoms and light. • Path integral formulation to obtain quantum phases. • Atom-field interaction at intersection of laser and atom geodesics. laser atom Atom and photon geodesics Prior work, de Broglie interferometry: Post-Newtonian effects of gravity on quantum interferometry, Shigeru Wajima, Masumi Kasai, Toshifumi Futamase, Phys. Rev. D, 55, 1997; Bordé, et al. Tests of General Relativity Schwarzschild metric, PPN expansion: Steady path of apparatus improvements include: Corresponding AI phase shifts: • Improved atom optics • Longer baseline • Sub-shot noise interference readout Projected experimental limits: (Dimopoulos, et al., PRL 2007; PRD 2008) Gravity waves Atoms provide inertially decoupled references Gravity wave phase shift through propagation of optical fields Evades quantum measurement noise (photon scattering regularized by nonlinear atom/photon interaction; prepare fresh atom ensemble each shot) Previous work: B. Lamine, et al., Eur. Phys. J. D 20, (2002); R. Chiao, et al., J. Mod. Opt. 51, (2004); S. Foffa, et al., Phys. Rev. D 73, (2006); A. Roura, et al., Phys. Rev. D 73, (2006); P. Delva, Phys. Lett. A 357 (2006); G. Tino, et al., Class. Quant. Grav. 24 (2007). Possible satellite configuration AGIS free-flying satellite concept In collaboration with GSFC (Bernie Seery, Babak Saif and coworkers) Considering ISS, free-flyer LEO configurations Recent analysis for Earth orbiting configurations: J. M. Hogan, D. M. S. Johnson, S. Dickerson, T. Kovachy, A. Sugarbaker, S. Chiow, P. W. Graham, M. A. Kasevich, B. Saif, S. Rajendran, P. Bouyer, B. D. Seery, L. Feinberg, and R Keski-Kuha, 1009.2702 (2010), submitted. Possible instrument configuration Error models Wavefront distortion: temporal variations Time varying wavefront inhomogeneities will lead to noncommon phase shifts between distant clouds of atoms - High spatial frequencies diffract out of the laser beam as the beam propagates between atom clouds - Limit for temporal stability of wavefronts determined by stability of final telescope mirror Mirror: Be at 300K J. M. Hogan, et al., 1009.2702 (2010), submitted; arXiv. See also, P. Bender, to be published. Atom cloud kinematic constrains Shot-to-shot jitter in the position of the atom cloud with respect to the satellite/laser beams constrains static wavefront curvature Wavefront error vs. spatial frequency, assuming 10 nm/Hz1/2 position jitter J. M. Hogan, et al., 1009.2702 (2010), submitted, arXiv See also, P. Bender, to be published. Acknowledgements – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – Grant Biedermann, PhD, Physics Ken Takase, PhD, Physics Igor Teper, Post-doctoral fellow John Stockton, Post-doctoral fellow Louis Delsauliers, Post-doctoral fellow Xinan Wu, PhD, Applied physics Jongmin Lee, Graduate student, Applied physics Chetan Mahadeswaraswamy, PhD, Mechanical engineering David Johnson, Graduate student, Physics Geert Vrijsen, Graduate student, Applied physics Jason Hogan, Post-doctoral fellow, Physics Sean Roy, Graduate student, Physics Tim Kovachy, Graduate student, Physics Alex Sugarbaker, Graduate student, Physics Susannah Dickerson, Graduate student, Physics + THEORY COLLABORATORS: S. Dimopolous, P. Graham, S. Rajendran + GSFC COLLABORATORS: B. Saif, B. Seery, L. Feinberg, R. Keski-Kuha + CNRS P. Bouyer (See talk, MIGA terrestrial GW detector) + AOSENSE TEAM