Many-body gap-protection of a strontium optical transition against Doppler dephasing via all-to-all exchange interactions mediated by a ring cavity

ORAL

Abstract

We realize a new method to extend the coherence time of a collective optical dipole moment in strontium by engineering a collective recoil mechanism that suppresses dephasing due to Doppler decoherence. The mechanism is akin to but distinct from, Mossbauer spectroscopy. Such suppression was first observed recently in the context of a Bragg matterwave interferometer by applying dressing lasers to generate cavity-mediated momentum-exchange interactions [1]. Here, we realize a large all-to-all spin-exchange interaction by loading 0.9 million 88Sr into a high finesse ring cavity that is detuned from resonance with the optical 7.5 kHz linewidth 1S0 to 3P1 transition. We observe that the coherence of a spin-wave, which is excited by driving the transition, is extended well beyond the Doppler dephasing time scale due to the spin exchange interactions. This opens a potential alternative to Lamb-Dicke confinement for suppressing Doppler dephasing in cold gases with possible applications in quantum sensing and quantum memories, as well as demonstrating an interesting platform for exploring quantum many-body physics in spin-orbit coupled systems.

*This material is based upon work supported by the US Department of Energy, Office of Science, National Quantum Information Science Research Centers, Quantum Systems Accelerator. We acknowledge additional funding support from the National Science Foundation under Grant Nos. 2317149 (Physics Frontier Center) and OMA-2016244 (Quantum Leap Challenge Institutes), and the National Institute of Standards and Technology.

Publication: [1] Luo, C., Zhang, H., Koh, V. P., Wilson, J. D., Chu, A., Holland, M. J., Rey, A. M., & Thompson, J. K. (2023). Cavity-Mediated Collective Momentum-Exchange Interactions, arXiv:2304.01411

Presenters

  • Zhijing Niu

    • JILA, University of Colorado Boulder
    • University of Colorado Boulder, JILA

Authors

  • Zhijing Niu

    • JILA, University of Colorado Boulder
    • University of Colorado Boulder, JILA
  • Dylan J Young

    • JILA
  • Eric Y Song

    • JILA, NIST, and Dept. of Physics, University of Colorado
  • Vera M Schäfer

    • JILA, University of Colorado
  • Chengyi Luo

    • University of Colorado, Boulder
  • James K Thompson

    • JILA, CU Boulder
    • JILA, NIST and University of Colorado Boulder
    • University of Colorado, Boulder