Boulder Flatirons

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Mar 24, 2011 - Quantity Name of unit Symbol for unit Value in SI units (a). Units accepted for use with the SI energy electronvolt eV. 1 eV = 1.602 176 53 (14) ...
Boulder Flatirons

– Thinking About Measurements – Standards, Accuracy, Repeatability Precision, and all that Jazz … John L Hall JILA University of Colorado Boulder CO 80309-0440 [email protected] http://jila.colorado.edu/hall/

Complex Quantum Systems Seminar University of Texas, Austin 24 March 2011

Lasers for Precision Measurement focusing on the start of 49 years of Laser fun Frequencies, Lengths, & Fundamental Physics John L. Hall

Jun Ye

JILA, National Institute of Standards and Technology and Department of Physics, University of Colorado at Boulder http://Jila.Colorado.edu/hall/

RS Symposium on a New SI ? London UK 24 January 2011

http://HallStableLasers.com

NI$T N$F NA$A ONR

Peter C. Doherty Columbia University Press New York 2006

Photo 1943, Brisbane Laureate 1996

NO GUARANTEE NO REFUND

Metrology, the Mother of Science Today’s Symposium features Length and Time/Frequency Ell, Braunschweig Metre Bar, Paris Cadmium Lamp A.A.Michelson Nobel Prize A.A.M. ±4 x10-7 Krypton Lamp ±4 x10-9 Methane-Stab. Laser ±1 x10-11 c adopted constant 0

Day Mean Solar Day Tropical Astronomical Year 1960 Cesium Second Cs Fountain Clock ±1 x10-15 Hg+ -stabilized Laser ±1 x10-15

~1600 ~1875 1887 1907 1960 1972 1983

1875 1967 ~2000 2004

Length – Depends on: Inter-atomic distances, E & M/ Quantum Mechanics

Frequency – Depends on: Internal electronic energy differences E & M/ Quantum Mechanics Fine-Structure Constant

1875 

1889  1960

BIPM’s Kg and Metre ProtoTypes Metre bar replaced in 1960 by light-wave definition – Krypton 605.7 nm line (Isotope 86) First optical fringe measurement by A. A. Michelson 1887

 Nobel Prize 1907

Optical Comb Thanks to Howard Layer

My thanks to H P Layer !

The earth has been measured as a basis for a permanent standard of length, and every property of metals has been investigated to guard against any alteration of the material standards when made. To weigh or measure any thing with modern accuracy, requires a course of experiment and calculation in which almost every branch of physics and mathematics is brought into requisition. Yet, after all, the dimensions of our earth and its time of rotation, though, relatively to our present means of comparison, very permanent, are not so by any physical necessity. The earth might contract by cooling, or it might be enlarged by a layer of meteorites falling on it, or its rate of revolution might slowly slacken, and yet it would continue to be as much a planet as before. But a molecule, say of hydrogen, if either its mass or its time of vibration were to be altered in the least, would no longer be a molecule of hydrogen. If, then, we wish to obtain standards of length, time, and mass which shall be absolutely permanent, we must seek them not in the dimensions, or the motion, or the mass of our planet, but in the wave-length, the period of vibration, and the absolute mass of these imperishable and unalterable and perfectly similar molecules. —James Clerk Maxwell, 1870.9.15 (Liverpool address) [Niven “papers” 1890 , p. 225 ] Quoted in Flowers, J Science 19 November 2004: Vol. 306 no. 5700 pp. 1324-1330 DOI: 10.1126/science.1102156

Table 1. SI base units Base quantity SI base unit _________________________________ __________________________ Name Symbol Name Symbol Length l, x, r, etc. metre m mass m kilogram kg time, duration t second s electric current I, i ampere A thermodynamic temperature T kelvin K amount of substance n mole mol luminous intensity Iv candela cd

Ref: http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP330/sp330.pdf

Table 7. Non-SI units whose values in SI units must be obtained experimentally Quantity Name of unit Symbol for unit Value in SI units (a)

Units accepted for use with the SI energy electronvolt eV 1 eV = 1.602 176 53 (14) × 10−19 J mass dalton, Da 1 Da = 1.660 538 86 (28) × 10−27 kg unified atomic mass unit u 1 u = 1 Da length astronomical unit ua 1 ua = 1.495 978 706 91 (6) × 1011 m Natural units (n.u.) speed n.u. of speed c0 299 792 458 m/s (exact) (speed of light in vacuum) action n.u. of action ħ 1.054 571 68 (18) × 10−34 J s (reduced Planck constant) mass n.u. of mass me 9.109 3826 (16) × 10−31 kg (electron mass) 2 time n.u. of time ħ/(me c0 ) 1.288 088 6677 (86) × 10−21 s

Atomic units (a.u.) charge a.u. of charge, e 1.602 176 53 (14) × 10−19 C (elementary charge) mass a.u. of mass, me 9.109 3826 (16) × 10−31 kg (electron mass) action a.u. of action, ħ 1.054 571 68 (18) × 10−34 J s (reduced Planck constant) length a.u. of length, bohr a0 0.529 177 2108 (18) × 10−10 m (Bohr radius) energy a.u. of energy, hartree Eh 4.359 744 17 (75) × 10−18 J (Hartree energy) time a.u. of time ħ/Eh 2.418 884 326 505 (16) × 10−17 s

Determining the Number of Atoms in a Mole by Counting!

B. Andreas + 29 others, 8 Institutes in 8 countries

“The Metre is the length of the path travelled by light (in vacuum) in 1/299 792 458 of a second” ie., c = 299 792 458 m/s, exactly CGPM 1983

Metre ReDefinition & Demotion

3.39m tunable Laser locked to 30 m Cavity

CH4 – stabilized HeNe 3.39m Laser

Some Friends in the UltraStable Laser Game – – – – – – – – – –

Bergquist group at NIST Boulder - present champs Oates, Hollberg et al NIST Bouder Gill, Webster & Co, at NPL, sub-Hertz linewidth Walther, Nevsky, at MPQ Hänsch group at MPQ Tamm, Peik at PTB Riehle group at PTB Katori at Tokyo + Hong at AIST Dube, Madej at NRC SYRTE optical clock group, Paris

– Please forgive omissions – I was retired for a while… and will soon be old enough to just forget stuff !

5/16/1960 Hughes Res. Ted Maiman Ruby Laser NonLinear Effects Pulsed Lasers

12/12/1960 Bell Labs Ali Javan - HeNe Stable Lasers Ultra-Sensitivity Techniques

Infrared and Optical Masers by Arthur L. Schawlow & C. H. Townes Physical Review 1958

The Amazing Laser Epoch Begins -- 1960

Javan, Bennett, Herriott cw gas Lasers 1960+

Optical Beats

NBS CH4 Frequency 88 THz

cw Lasers Pulsed Lasers

Metre Re-definition

1972

Cw Stable Solid-State Lasers

COMBs

1983 1990’s

2-H Gen. Burn Air Razor Sparks Blades

Ted Maiman Ruby Laser 1960

sub-HertzAccuracy Frequency Measurement

kJ Lasers

t

2000

fs ModeLocked Lasers

Tera-Watt Table-Top Laser

50 Years of the Laser Epoch

Sub-Hertz Linewidth fs Combs

INSPIRATION of the YOUNG

Hearing the lasers’ Optical Beat as an audio whistle completely changed my research career!

Ali Javan inventor/designer of the Helium-Neon Laser First oscillations: 12 Dec.1960, Bell Labs Demonstration of Optical Heterodyne Beats 1961

Saturated Neon Absorption inside a 6328-Å Laser Paul H. Lee and Michael J. Skolnick

CH4 Saturated Absorption at 3.39 m Narrow ! Strong !

~August 1968

Barger and Hall

A New Wavelength Standard? !!!

HeNe laser fringes (at 3.39 m)

Krypton fringes (at 605.7 nm) 4 x10-9 in 300 s !

Frequency Scan R. L. Barger and JLH ’71 APL 22, 196 (1973)

Hall, Bender, Faller, 1968.Quantum Electronics Conference, QE-1, p371

J Hall at entrance to Poorman’s Relief Gold Mine (site of JILA 30 m evacuated interferometer, Boulder ~1968)

How can we multiply frequency by 10-thousand fold?

Ken Evenson (1972) + Joe Wells, Don Jennings … x14

x6 x12 x3 = 3024

1 electronic stage + 3 Lasers stabilized

Measures

the

CO2 Laser 32 THz (9.3 micrometers)

The First NBS Optical Frequency Chain NBS (NIST): measurement of speed of light, 1972

J. Wells

K. Evenson

J. L. Hall & J. Ye, “NIST 100th birthday”, Optics & Photonics News 12, 44, Feb. 2001

Frequency spectrum in optical frequency synthesis 1015 1014 1013

Log Frequency (Hz)

1012 1011 1010

107

H, Hg+ Ca I2 Rb, Cs

Molecular overtones

H2O

CH4 OsO4

CO2

Visible

Lasers

MIM or Schottky diode

CH3OH HCOOH HCN

BWO

Cs

Crystal oscillator

Microwave oscillators, Klystrons, etc.

W-Si wave diode

The NBS Speed of Light Program:

 =88 376 181 627. kHz ± 50.

c=

Evenson’s  Team K.M.E., J.S. Wells, F.R. Petersen B.L.Danielson, & G.W. Day And D. A. Jenning$

 =3 392.231 390 nm ± .000 01

c = 299, 792, 457.4 m/s

JILA  Team R. L.Barger & J. L. Hall

Our Finest Product !

±1.1 Phys. Rev. Lett. 29, 1346 (1972)

Redefinition of the International SI Metre 1960: Metre is 1 650 763.73 waves of Kr orange line

THE SPEED OF LIGHT C = 299 792 458 m/s (exact) THE METRE DEFINITION (1983) The meter is the length of the path travelled by light in vacuum during a time interval of 1/299 792 458 of a second.

17th Conférence Général des Poids et Mesures, Paris, October 1983

Re-Definition and Demotion of the Meter in SI

NICE-OHMS Intra-cavity Dispersion Optical Lattice Trap trapping w Magic Wavelength

Ye, Ma, Hall ’96 Katori, Ye ‘05

Venya Chebotayev & Ken Evenson

“How are we going to measure those optical frequencies?”

Lindy, Vera, Ken, & Venya

Celebrating the new Hall_Labs, April 1988

Talking Science in Munich - 2005

Jan, Thomas Udem

Ted Ron Drever

The Optical Comb Concept T. W. Hänsch, V. P. Chebotayev ~1977

1960 Hughes Res. Ted Maiman Ruby Laser NonLinear Effects Pulsed Lasers

1960 Bell Labs Ali Javan - HeNe Stable Lasers Ultra-Sensitivity Techniques

Phase-Stabilization Techniques fs Lasers Ultra-NonLinearity SuperContinuum

Update to 1999

Hänsch group – Garching Hall group - Boulder

the Optical Comb - 39 years Later

Serious nonlinear optics R. Windeler

J.K Ranka, R. S. Windeler, A. Stenz, Opt. Lett. 25, 25 (Jan. 2000)

Microstructured fiber dispersion zero at ~800 nm pulses do not spread continuum generation via self-phase modulation

Lucent Technologies

Detected Power (dBm)

-30

After fiber -40 -50 -60

Pre-fiber (Ti:S)

-70

400

600

800 1000 Wavelength (nm)

1200

Optical Frequency is Synchronized with the Pulse Repetition Frequency  Each pulse has the same shape …

The Optical Frequency Tool for all Seasons Comb Another Tool for All Seasons

From Ye, Schnatz, & Hollberg 2003

“Frequency Ratio of Al+ and Hg+ Single-Ion Optical Clocks; Metrology at the 17th Decimal Place” T. Rosenband,* D. B. Hume, P. O. Schmidt,† C. W. Chou, A. Brusch, L. Lorini,‡ W. H. Oskay, R. E. Drullinger, T. M. Fortier, J. E. Stalnaker,∥ S. A. Diddams, W. C. Swann, N. R. Newbury, W. M. Itano, D. J. Wineland, J. C. Bergquist, all at NIST Boulder p1808, 28 MARCH 2008 VOL 319 SCIENCE www.sciencemag.org

5/16/1960 HughesComb Res. Applications – Jun Ye 12/12/1960 Ted Maiman Bellmeasurement Labs • Optical frequency Ruby Laser Ali Javan - HeNe

Group

• Measure and Improve Stable Lasers NonLinear • LISA Gravitational Wave Space Interferometer Stable Lasers Effects • Synchronize Lasers • Time/Frequency TransferUltra-Sensitivity Pulsed Lasers Techniques • Synchronize Accelerators & Radio Telescopes • Optical Frequency Standards • Possible Variation of Physical “Constants” ? Phase-Stabilization • Gravity-coupling to Atomic Techniques Physics? fs Lasers• Generate Coherent uV and X-Rays • Sensitive Analysis of Human Breath Ultra-NonLinearity • Calibrate Astronomical Spectra – ExoPlanets? SuperContinuum

Hänsch group – Garching Hall group - Boulder

the Optical Comb - 39 years Later

Record-high quality factor Q ~ 2.5 x 1014 0.10

Fourier Limit: 1.8 Hz

0.08 0.06

Probe-time limited (~ 500ms)

0.04 0.02 0.00

3

P0(mF=5/2) Population

Boyd, Zelevinsky, Ludlow, Foreman, Blatt, Ido, & Ye, Science 314, 1430 (2006).

-6

-4

-2

0

2

4

6

Laser Detuning (Hz)

• Single trace without averaging • Est. instability ~ 1x10-15/√t

JILA Strontium Lattice Clock

With Lattice Intensity

With Density

Sr Lattice Clock at 1 × 10–16 Fractional Uncertainty by Remote Optical Evaluation with a Ca Clock A. Ludlow, G Campbell, ….

NIST T & F team, …. Jun Ye

Science 08

Metrological Standards Issues and Principles: Available in any country Acceptable cost Convenience of use – echelons of accuracy levels Precision and Repeatability valuable, even if a stable offset exists Accurate-enough, conforming to treaty standards

Independently Realizable Belongs to an elegant intellectual framework No Stake-Holder loses by the transition Funding Principle for the Research? Cost to users ~> research cost -- hmm Further research opens qualitatively new areas and possibilities? Research is a world-cooperation, driven by curiosity

WOW ! ~5 x10-5

NIST Cs Standard ~1 x10-16

Dissemination of the Standard

Optical Clock ~1 x10-17

laser

fRep

fs comb fRL Ref. Laser

Gauge-Block Interferometer

Length Metrology –

post 1983 – via the Metre = c/

Artifact Approach Corning’s ULE dL / dT T0 ~15 C

L/L ~1.8 x10-9 T2 ZERO linear Expansion

1987 JILA ULE bar

We can set T = T0 + 30 mK  / T ~ 30 Hz /mK at 532 nm Drift-Rate ~ +10 mHz/s ~ 860 Hz/day (~200 days per atomic layer)

1987 JILA Cavity, ULE ~ 0 Expansion at 14.7 C Length change ~ 1 x10-12/day ~200 days to change by one atom’s diameter

JILA 1987 ULE Reference Cavity

Vacuum Shell, heated

Outer thermal shell, cooled

Mass center surface

L - L Mass center surface

Cancellation of Length Change, based on Symmetry! L + L Mass center surface

g linewidth 1 Hz sidebands 18 & 5.5

600 500

Power Spectrum

x10

Sub-Hertz Laser Linewidth -- on a Table Top !

-6

400 300 200

Delta Optical Frequency (Hz)

100

JILA/HallGroup_05

0 51.15

51.20

51.25 3

x10

5 cm Barger Cavity W Midplane Support Disk attached w RTV adhesive Add In wire bits  Easily trim to -40 dB

3 PZT Shakers

Vibration-Insensitive Cavity Designs II Webster, Oxborrow & Gill Phys Rev A 75, 011801R 2007

Bergquist & Rosenband

Design for Zero along all 3 axes !

Chen, Hall, Ye 2006

Zero net change

X 5 x106

Vibration-Insensitive Cavity Designs

Each half sags 3.7 x10-8 /g Symmetric design  87 ppt/g net Asymm of 0.15 mm  1.1 ppt /g

LISA Frequency Reference L = 14 cm ULE 2006 Design, P.L. Bender

Thermal-Noise Limit in the Frequency Stabilization of Lasers with Rigid Cavities PRL 93, 250602 (2004) Kenji Numata,* Amy Kemery, and Jordan Camp Laboratory for High Energy Astrophysics NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland 20771, USA

We evaluate thermal noise (Brownian motion) in a rigid reference cavity used for frequency stabilization of lasers, based on the mechanical loss of cavity materials and the numerical analysis of the mirror-spacer mechanics with the direct application of the fluctuation dissipation theorem. This noise sets a fundamental limit for the frequency stability achieved with a rigid frequency-reference cavity of order 1 Hz / Hz (0.01 Hz /  Hz ) at 10 mHz (100 Hz) at room temperature. This level coincides with the world-highest level stabilization results.

Thermal-mechanical Position Noise Numata et al prl 93 2004

where One-sided power spectrum of av’g’d displacement noise

Coating loss

x



Acoustic mechanical loss of averaged position response to a local force

 ULE, 24 cm cavity length, 8 cm diam.

Numata et al, prl 93 (2004)

Noise Frequency Density Results from NIST_B and VIRGO,

Compared with estimated from Numata’s Thermal Model  x ~  f ~ 1/ Sqrt (f)

Beatnote betweeen two Lasers

tc

> 2s

Measur. Noise floor

Mirror thermal noise Accel-caused noise

Ludlow, Ye et al., Opt Lett 32 641 (2007)

Ludlow, Ye et al, OPTICS LETTERS March 15, 2007 / Vol. 32, No. 6 / p 641

Sr, 429 THz t = 0.48 s t scan = 30 s

Rio Laser

Phase Mod

Anti-RAM Q

S F

Frequency Servo

fsr

PDH

I I

Optical Sampler

Q

Anti-RAM Servos

PDH, fsr Det.

Sub-Hz Optical Frequency Reference System© Predicted Results, 12 cm cavity length, 1 s tau HCCH CO CO2

P(16) 1534.742 nm 0.004 W 0.x Hz R(3) 1563.149 nm 2.04 W 0.x Hz R(24) 1563.111 nm 1.54 W 0.x Hz

NICE-OHMS Detector

Jan’s Proposed Tools For the STAR Mission (Space-Time Anisotropy Research)

Multiple Redundant Cavities

Duplicate Atomic Clocks

Gas-Cell Frequency Standard CO or CO2 1500 nm telecom optics Ke-Xun Sun’s Multipass Idea for the Gas Cell

the HallLabs team welcomes your comments …

The Y2K HallLabs Team welcomes your comments …

Long-sheng Ma

jan

Jun Ye

Thanks for Listening • http://jila.colorado.edu/hall/ • http://HallStableLasers.com •

http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/2005/hall-lecture.html

• Jun - http://jila.colorado.edu/YeLabs/ • Lindy – http://Sci-TeksDiscoveryProgramforKids.org •

NIST - http://tf.nist.gov/timefreq/



50 Years of Lasers http://LaserFest.org

And now, to challenge and inspire a future generation of scientists … Moore Middle School, Jefferson County CO

http://Sci-TeksDiscoveryProgramforKids.org

The next generation looks promising to me ..

Grace 11 Catherine 9

John 5

Rocket Test Area Sandwich, Cape Cod, MA

Before Computers

2001: Advanced by Technology

Pete Bender, Venia Chebotayev and Siu-Au Lee help open the new and improved JILA HallLabs 1988

Lucent Technologies JILA spectrum

10 cm length

Detected Power (dBm)

-30 -40

Coupled Pow er 43 mW 26 mW 10 mW 3 mW input

-50 -60 -70 400

S. Diddams, D. Jones

600

800 1000 Wavelength (nm)

1200

Barger & Hall Prl 22 p4 (1969)

Understanding Saturated Absorption 1.0

1.0

0.8

0.8

0.6

0.6

Doppler’s Frequency-view of Maxwell’s Velocity Distribution

0.4 0.2

Population Density vs Velocity

0.4 0.2 0.0

0.0 -400

-200

0

200

-400

400

-200

0

200

400

150 1.0

100

0.8

1.0 50

Refractive Index vs Frequency --> A Gas Lens!

0.80

0.6

-50 0.6

Idealized Lamb’s Dip Response

0.4 0.2

-100 0.4 -150 0.2

0.0 -400

-200

0

200

400

Laser Power vs Frequency -400

-200

0

200

400

0

200

400

0.0 -400

-200

Fig. 1. Some milestones in the development of quantum metrology.

J Flowers Science 2004;306:1324-1330

Published by AAAS

– Thinking About Tools – +a few Sub-Random Remarks re: Science, Education, & More … John L Hall JILA University of Colorado Boulder CO 80309-0440 [email protected] http://jila.colorado.edu/hall/

F. A. Matsen Endowed Regents Lecture University of Texas, Austin 23 March 2011

~1940

Some of my Best Friends, in High School, were Radio Tubes

1950’s

~1943 - 1947

“ Receptions were unexpected and tough work, but somebody’s got to do it …. “

The Stockholm Concert Hall is Packed for the Ceremony

December 10, 2005

Stockholm December 10, 2005