Bulletin of the American Physical Society
51st Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics
Volume 65, Number 4
Monday–Friday, June 1–5, 2020; Portland, Oregon
Session H11: TOPTICA Photonics Workshop: From Lasers to Clocks: TOPTICA’s Involvement in Quantum TechnologiesInteractive
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Room: Portland 256 |
Wednesday, June 3, 2020 12:30PM - 1:30PM |
H11.00001: TOPTICA Photonics Workshop: From Lasers to Clocks: TOPTICA’s Involvement in Quantum Technologies Juergen Stuhler TOPTICA Photonics is heavily involved in quantum technologies (QT), both as a provider of quantum-enabling laser systems and as a key partner in collaborative QT projects, including two funded by the German government and four that are part of European quantum flagship efforts. Two of these projects aim at the realization of user-friendly and transportable optical atomic clocks. Within the German pilot project “opticlock” (www.opticlock.de), TOPTICA leads a consortium of six companies, two universities, one federal institute, and one research institute to realize a 19” rack-sized optical atomic clock based on a single Yb ion. The clock is set up and is currently being evaluated at the German metrology institute Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB) in Braunschweig/Germany. TOPTICA’s role in the project is manyfold: coordinator, system designer, system integrator, and provider of lasers. Besides a description of these roles, I will present the opticlock set-up and report on the characterization of the opticlock performance. In the quantum flagship project “iqClock” (www.iqclock.eu), an optical atomic clock based on Sr atoms within a magic wavelength optical lattice is being built. TOPTICA has developed 19” rack-integrable tunable diode laser systems as well as optical frequency combs and will provide a laser rack system containing all lasers required to operate the clock.. I will present details on this laser rack system and show how it also paves the way for other quantum technology applications such as quantum computing or quantum simulation. [Preview Abstract] |
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