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G.J. Dick

Bio: G.J. Dick is an academic researcher from California Institute of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Frequency standard & Resonator. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 79 publications receiving 1952 citations. Previous affiliations of G.J. Dick include University of California, Berkeley.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A physical analysis of the response of a two-level atom to the interrogation oscillator phase noise in Ramsey and multi-Rabi interrogation schemes using a standard quantum mechanical approach helps to calculate the degradation of the frequency stability of a pulsed atomic frequency standard.
Abstract: Atomic frequency standards using trapped ions or cold atoms work intrinsically in a pulsed mode. Theoretically and experimentally, this mode of operation has been shown to lead to a degradation of the frequency stability due to the frequency noise of the interrogation oscillator. In this paper a physical analysis of this effect has been made by evaluating the response of a two-level atom to the interrogation oscillator phase noise in Ramsey and multi-Rabi interrogation schemes using a standard quantum mechanical approach. This response is then used to calculate the degradation of the frequency stability of a pulsed atomic frequency standard such as an atomic fountain or an ion trap standard. Comparison is made to an experimental evaluation of this effect in the LPTF Cs fountain frequency standard, showing excellent agreement.

274 citations

01 Dec 1987
TL;DR: In this paper, the influence of phase noise fluctuations in the reference oscillator on the performance of the standard as a function of duty cycle for a local oscillator with frequency fluctuations showing a 1/f spectral density.
Abstract: The trapped ion frequency source is one of a class of passive atomic frequency standards that necessarily use an ancillary frequency source to interrogate the atomic transition. For passive atomic sources such as Rubidium standards, ultimate long term performance of the source is not dependent on this local oscillator, except to the extent limited by feedback gain. For the trapped ion source this immunity to local oscillator phase noise is lost. In contrast to the Rubidium source, a sequential measurement procedure is used in which the signal from the local oscillator is sensed only some of the time. Since the local oscillator is only periodically sampled, certain short term fluctuations in the local oscillator frequency will give rise to long term fluctuations in the difference between the stabilized local oscillator frequency and that of the atomic absorption. We have performed calculations of the influence of such phase noise fluctuations in the reference oscillator on the performance of the standard as a function of duty cycle for a local oscillator with frequency fluctuations showing a 1/f spectral density, as is typically shown by crystal Quartz oscillators for long measuring times (1-100 seconds). Expressions are generated for the limiting trapped ion -1/2 variance due to the local Oscillator for various values for the duty factor d. Explicitly treated are the cases d<1, d=1-6, (6 < 1) and d = 1/2. It is seen that for a duty factor < 90%, local Oscillator performance equal to that of the ion standard (for a measuring timer equal to the period te of the sampling cycle) will significantly degrade the characteristic 1-1/2 passive atomic standard performance. For d near 1, (6 = (1-d) < 1) an approximately linear dependence of this degradation on 6 is found.

262 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a linear ion trap was designed to store a large number of ions with reduced susceptibility to the second-order Doppler effect caused by the rf confining fields.
Abstract: We have designed a novel linear ion trap which permits storage of a large number of ions with reduced susceptibility to the second‐order Doppler effect caused by the rf confining fields. This new trap should store about 20 times the number of ions as a conventional rf trap with no corresponding increase in second‐order Doppler shift from the confining field. In addition the sensitivity of this shift to trapping parameters, i.e., rf voltage, rf frequency, and trap size, is greatly reduced.

228 citations

01 May 1990
TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of frequency fluctuations in an ancillary local oscillator (L.O.) on the sensitivity of microwave and optical trapped ion standards was analyzed. But the sensitivity was not considered for the case of sequentially interrogated standards.
Abstract: As the performance of passive atomic frequency standards improves, a new limitation is encountered due to frequency fluctuations in an ancillary local oscillator (L.O.). The effect is due to time variation in the gain of the feedback which compensates L.O. frequency fluctuations. The high performance promised by new microwave and optical trapped ion standards may be severely compromised by this effect. Researchers present an analysis of this performance limitation for the case of sequentially interrogated standards. The time dependence of the sensitivity of the interrogation process to L.O. frequency fluctuations is evaluated for single-pulse and double-pulse Ramsey RF interrogation and for amplitude modulated pulses. The effect of these various time dependencies on performance of the standard is calculated for an L.O. with frequency fluctuations showing a typical 1/f spectral density. A limiting 1/sq. root gamma dependent deviation of frequency fluctuations is calculated as a function of pulse lengths, dead time, and pulse overlap. Researchers also present conceptual and hardware-oriented solutions to this problem which achieve a much more nearly constant sensitivity to L.O. fluctuations. Solutions involve use of double-pulse interrogation; alternate interrogation of multiple traps so that the dead time of one trap can be covered by operation of the other; and the use of double-pulse interrogation for two traps, so that during the time of the RF pulses, the increasing sensitivity of one trap tends to compensate for the decreasing sensitivity of the other. A solution making use of amplified-modulated pulses is also presented which shows nominally zero time variation.

96 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
27 May 1992
TL;DR: In this paper, a cooling sapphire microwave resonator was used to characterize the phase noise of a single crystal quartz oscillator of the highest quality, without the use of a second similar oscillator as reference.
Abstract: First results are presented for an X-band frequency discriminator using a cooled sapphire microwave resonator. These results show a lower close-in (1-Hz-1-kHz offset) phase noise measurement floor than any oscillator presently available. This performance is made possible by a sapphire whispering-gallery mode resonator which shows the highest quality factor (with Q's up to 30 million) of any RF microwave, or acoustic resonator at temperatures to 77 K. Performance is increased by use of phase detection circuitry. The sapphire discriminator is used to characterize the phase noise of a single crystal quartz oscillator of the highest quality, without the use of a second similar oscillator as reference. >

74 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Improved trapping efficiency and increased ion capacity are observed relative to a three-dimensional (3-D) ion trap with similar mass range, although adequate mechanical tolerance of the trap structure is a requirement.

791 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
13 Sep 2013-Science
TL;DR: The development and operation of two optical lattice clocks are described, both using spin-polarized, ultracold atomic ytterbium, and an unprecedented atomic clock instability of 1.6 × 10–18 after only 7 hours of averaging is demonstrated.
Abstract: Atomic clocks have been instrumental in science and technology, leading to innovations such as global positioning, advanced communications, and tests of fundamental constant variation. Timekeeping precision at 1 part in 10 18 enables new timing applications in relativistic geodesy, enhanced Earth- and space-based navigation and telescopy, and new tests of physics beyond the standard model. Here, we describe the development and operation of two optical lattice clocks, both using spin-polarized, ultracold atomic ytterbium. A measurement comparing these systems demonstrates an unprecedented atomic clock instability of 1.6 × 10 –18 after only 7 hours of averaging.

746 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, three methods of detecting micromotion of ions in Paul traps have been described, including the change of the average ion position as the trap potentials are changed, and the amplitude of the sidebands of a narrow atomic transition, caused by the first-order Doppler shift due to the ion's ion motion.
Abstract: Micromotion of ions in Paul traps has several adverse effects, including alterations of atomic transition line shapes, significant second-order Doppler shifts in high-accuracy studies, and limited confinement time in the absence of cooling. The ac electric field that causes the micromotion may also induce significant Stark shifts in atomic transitions. We describe three methods of detecting micromotion. The first relies on the change of the average ion position as the trap potentials are changed. The second monitors the amplitude of the sidebands of a narrow atomic transition, caused by the first-order Doppler shift due to the micromotion. The last technique detects the Doppler shift induced modulation of the fluorescence rate of a broad atomic transition. We discuss the detection sensitivity of each method to Doppler and Stark shifts, and show experimental results using the last technique.

672 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Within the past three years, a wide variety of molecules, ranging from OCS to large organic molecules such as amino acids and a number of van der Waals complexes and even large metal clusters, have been embedded in He droplets and studied either in infrared or in the visible region.
Abstract: ▪ Abstract Laser ablation of in situ metals has recently made it possible to immerse a large number of different metal atoms and ions and small clusters of metal atoms in liquid helium (He) and thus study their absorption and emission spectra in the visible region. Atoms and molecules are readily picked up by large ( ≥ 103 atoms) He droplets, and their spectra are sensitively detected through the use of either beam depletion following absorption or laser-induced fluorescence. Within the past three years, a wide variety of molecules, ranging from OCS to large organic molecules such as amino acids and a number of van der Waals complexes and even large metal clusters, have been embedded in He droplets and studied either in infrared or in the visible region. These results are discussed here in detail, and the evidence for the effect of superfluidity on the spectral features is reviewed.

486 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a linear quadrupole ion trap is used to extract high-sensitivity mass spectral responses, which can result in extraction of as much as 20% of the trapped ions.
Abstract: Characteristics of mass selective axial ion ejection from a linear quadrupole ion trap in the presence of an auxiliary quadrupole field are described. Ion ejection is shown to occur through coupling of radial and axial motion in the exit fringing fields of the linear ion trap. The coupling is efficient and can result in extraction of as much as 20% of the trapped ions. This, together with the very high trapping efficiencies, can yield high sensitivity mass spectral responses. The experimental apparatus is based on the ion path of a triple quadrupole mass spectrometer allowing either the q2 collision cell or the final mass analysis quadrupole to be used as the linear trap. Space charge induced distortions of the mass resolved features while using the pressurized q2 linear ion trap occur at approximately the same ion density as reported for conventional three-dimensional ion traps. These distortions are, however, much reduced for the lower pressure linear trap possibly owing to the proposed axial ejection mechanism that leads to ion ejection only for ions of considerable radial amplitude. RF heating due to the high ejection q-value and the low collision frequency may also contribute. Two hybrid RF/DC quadrupole-linear ion trap instruments are described that provide high sensitivity product ion scanning while operated in the linear ion trap mode while also retaining all conventional triple quadrupole scan modes such as precursor ion and neutral loss scan modes. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

485 citations