Ultimate stability of active optical frequency standards

authored by
Georgy A. Kazakov, Swadheen Dubey, Anna Bychek, Uwe Sterr, Marcin Bober, Michał Zawada
Abstract

Active optical frequency standards provide interesting alternatives to their passive counterparts. Particularly, such a clock alone continuously generates highly stable narrow-line laser radiation. Thus, a local oscillator is not required to keep the optical phase during a dead time between interrogations as in passive clocks, but only to boost the active clock's low output power to practically usable levels with the current state of technology. Here we investigate the spectral properties and the stability of active clocks, including homogeneous and inhomogeneous broadening effects. We find that for short averaging times the stability is limited by photon shot noise from the limited emitted laser power and at long averaging times by phase diffusion of the laser output. Operational parameters for best long-term stability were identified. Using realistic numbers for an active clock with Sr87, we find that optimized stability of σy(τ)≈4×10-18/τ[s] is achievable.

External Organisation(s)
TU Wien (TUW)
University of Innsbruck
National Metrology Institute of Germany (PTB)
Nicolaus Copernicus University
Type
Article
Journal
Physical Review A
Volume
106
ISSN
2469-9926
Publication date
23.11.2022
Publication status
Published
Peer reviewed
Yes
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
Electronic version(s)
https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2205.14130 (Access: Open)
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.106.053114 (Access: Open)