State-Insensitive trapping of alkaline-earth atoms in a nanofiber-based optical dipole trap

ORAL

Abstract

Neutral atoms that are optically trapped using the evanescent fields surrounding optical nanofibers are a promising platform for developing quantum technologies and exploring fundamental science, such as quantum networks and many-body physics of interacting photons. Building on the successful advancements with trapped alkali atoms, here we trap strontium-88 atoms, an alkaline-earth element, in a state-insensitive, nanofiber-based optical dipole trap using the evanescent fields of an optical nanofiber. Employing a two-color, double magic-wavelength trapping scheme, we realize state-insensitive trapping of the atoms for the kilohertz-wide 1S03P1,|m|=1 intercombination transition, which we verify by performing high-resolution spectroscopy for an atom-surface distance of about 300 nm. Alkaline-earth atoms also exhibit nonmagnetic ground states and ultranarrow linewidth transitions making them ideal candidates for atomic clocks and precision metrology applications, especially with state-insensitive traps. Additionally, given the low collisional scattering length specific to strontium-88, this work also lays the foundation for developing versatile and robust matter-wave atomtronic circuits over nanophotonic waveguides.

*Supported by the Office of Naval Research under Grants No. N00014-20-1-2513 and No. N00014-20-1-2693 and NSF Grant No. PHY-2012068

Publication: PRX Quantum 4, 040308 (2023)

Presenters

  • Julio T Barreiro

    • University of California San Diego

Authors

  • Julio T Barreiro

    • University of California San Diego
  • Grady Kestler

    • University of California San Diego
  • Khang Ton

    • University of California San Diego
  • Dmytro Filin

    • University of Delaware
  • Charles Cheung

    • University of Delaware
  • Philipp Schneeweiss

    • Humboldt Universität zu Berlin
  • Thomas Hoinkes

    • Humboldt Universität zu Berlin
  • J. Volz

    • Humboldt Universität zu Berlin
  • Marianna Safronova

    • U Delaware
  • Arno Rauschenbeutel

    • Humboldt Universität zu Berlin