James C. Bergquist
National Institute of Standards and Technology
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Featured researches published by James C. Bergquist.
Journal of Applied Physics | 1998
D J. Berkeland; J D. Miller; James C. Bergquist; Wayne M. Itano; David J. Wineland
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.
Journal of The Optical Society of America B-optical Physics | 2003
J. Ye; Jin Long Peng; R. Jason Jones; Kevin W. Holman; John L. Hall; David J. Jones; Scott A. Diddams; John Kitching; S Bize; James C. Bergquist; Leo W. Hollberg; Lennart Robertsson; L . Ma
Optical and radio frequency standards located in JILA and National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) laboratories have been connected through a 3.45-km optical fiber link. An optical frequency standard based on an iodine-stabilized Nd:YAG laser at 1064 nm (with an instability of ∼4×10-14 at 1 s) has been transferred from JILA to NIST and simultaneously measured in both laboratories. In parallel, a hydrogen maser-based radio frequency standard (with an instability of ∼2.4×10-13 at 1 s) is transferred from NIST to JILA. Comparison between these frequency standards is made possible by the use of femtosecond frequency combs in both laboratories. The degradation of the optical and rf standards that are due to the instability in the transmission channel has been measured. Active noise cancellation is demonstrated to improve the transfer stability of the fiber link.
Physical Review Letters | 2003
S Bize; Scott A. Diddams; U Tanaka; Carol E. Tanner; Windell H. Oskay; Robert E. Drullinger; Thomas E. Parker; Thomas P. Heavner; Steven R. Jefferts; Leo W. Hollberg; Wayne M. Itano; James C. Bergquist
Over a two-year duration, we have compared the frequency of the 199Hg+ 5d(10)6s (2)S(1/2)(F=0)<-->5d(9)6s(2) (2)D(5/2)(F=2) electric-quadrupole transition at 282 nm with the frequency of the ground-state hyperfine splitting in neutral 133Cs. These measurements show that any fractional time variation of the ratio nu(Cs)/nu(Hg) between the two frequencies is smaller than +/-7 x 10(-15) yr(-1) (1sigma uncertainty). According to recent atomic structure calculations, this sets an upper limit to a possible fractional time variation of g(Cs)(m(e)/m(p))alpha(6.0) at the same level.
Optics Letters | 2005
Albrecht Bartels; Scott A. Diddams; Chris Oates; G Wilpers; James C. Bergquist; Windell H. Oskay; Leo W. Hollberg
We use femtosecond laser frequency combs to convert optical frequency references to the microwave domain, where we demonstrate the synthesis of 10-GHz signals having a fractional frequency instability of < or =3.5 x 10(-15) at a 1-s averaging time, limited by the optical reference. The residual instability and phase noise of the femtosecond-laser-based frequency synthesizers are 6.5 x 10(-16) at 1 s and -98 dBc/Hz at a 1-Hz offset from the 10-GHz carrier, respectively. The timing jitter of the microwave signals is 3.3 fs.
Journal of Modern Optics | 1992
M G. Raizen; Jonathan M. Gilligan; James C. Bergquist; Wayne M. Itano; David J. Wineland
Abstract In a linear r.f. Paul trap, ‘crystallized’ structures of laser-cooled 199Hg+ ions are observed. The ground-state hyperfine transition at 40·5 GHz is observed in microwave-optical double-resonance spectroscopy. Future prospects are also discussed.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 1996
M E. Poitzsch; James C. Bergquist; Wayne M. Itano; David J. Wineland
We have observed linear ‘‘crystals’’ of up to tens of laser‐cooled 199Hg+ ions in a linear rf ion trap. The trap operates at liquid‐He temperature and is designed for use as a prototype 40.5 GHz frequency standard with high accuracy and stability.
Optics Express | 2011
David R. Leibrandt; Michael J. Thorpe; James C. Bergquist; T. Rosenband
We operate a frequency-stable laser in a non-laboratory environment where the test platform is a passenger vehicle. We measure the acceleration experienced by the laser and actively correct for it to achieve a system acceleration sensitivity of Δf / f = 11(2) × 10(−12)/g, 6(2) × 10(−12)/g, and 4(1) × 10(−12)/g for accelerations in three orthogonal directions at 1 Hz. The acceleration spectrum and laser performance are evaluated with the vehicle both stationary and moving. The laser linewidth in the stationary vehicle with engine idling is 1.7(1) Hz.
Applied Optics | 1997
D J. Berkeland; Flavio C. Cruz; James C. Bergquist
Over 2 mW of continuous-wave tunable 194-nm light is produced by sum-frequency mixing approximately 500 mW of 792-nm and 500 mW of 257-nm radiation in beta-barium borate (BBO). The powers in both fundamental beams are enhanced in separate ring cavities whose optical paths overlap in the Brewster-cut BBO crystal. Due to the higher circulating fundamental powers, the sum-frequency-generated power is nearly 2 orders of magnitude greater than previously reported values.
Physics Today | 2001
James C. Bergquist; Steven R. Jefferts; David J. Wineland
The latest clocks use a single ion to measure time with an anticipated precision of one part in 1018.
Physical Review A | 1998
Wayne M. Itano; James C. Bergquist; John J. Bollinger; David J. Wineland; U. Eichmann; Mark G. Raizen
The interference pattern of the resonance fluorescence from a