Rydberg Spectroscopy and imaging of single Holmium atoms

ORAL

Abstract

Neutral holmium with its large number of hyperfine ground states provides a promising approach for collective encoding of a multi-qubit register. Collective encoding relies on the use of Rydberg blockade to create a one-to-one correspondence between singly excited states of the atomic ensemble and logical register states. As a step towards collective encoding with Rydberg blockade in holmium we have precisely measured the energy of ns and nd Rydberg states from n$=$41-101 using MOT depletion spectroscopy[1]. These measurements have resulted in a precise determination of the first ionization potential as well as the quantum defects of the singlet ns and nd series. The strong 410.5 nm cooling transition with $\sim$ 33 MHz linewidth coupled with the large hyperfine splitting in the electronically excited state are predicted to enable fast, loss-free, and state sensitive measurements which are a prerequisite for collective encoding experiments. We report on progress towards single-atom trapping and state sensitive detection of holmium in a far off-resonant optical dipole trap. \\[4pt] [1] J. Hostetter, J. D. Pritchard, J. E. Lawler, and M. Saffman, Phys. Rev. A 91, 012507 (2015).

*Work supported by NSF award PHY-1404357.

Authors

  • James Hostetter

    • University of Wisconsin, Madison
  • Jonathan Pritchard

    • Department of Physics, University of Wisconsin, 1150 University Avenue, Madison, Wisconsin 53706
    • University of Wisconsin, Madison
  • Mark Saffman

    • University of Wisconsin, Madison
    • Department of Physics, University of Wisconsin, 1150 University Avenue, Madison, Wisconsin 53706
    • Department of Physics, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI.
    • University of Wisconsin
    • University of Wisconsin-Madison