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Dive into the research topics where Scott B. Papp is active.

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Featured researches published by Scott B. Papp.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Cavity opto-mechanics using an optically levitated nanosphere

Darrick E. Chang; C. A. Regal; Scott B. Papp; D. J. Wilson; J. Ye; Oskar Painter; H. J. Kimble; P. Zoller

Recently, remarkable advances have been made in coupling a number of high-Q modes of nano-mechanical systems to high-finesse optical cavities, with the goal of reaching regimes in which quantum behavior can be observed and leveraged toward new applications. To reach this regime, the coupling between these systems and their thermal environments must be minimized. Here we propose a novel approach to this problem, in which optically levitating a nano-mechanical system can greatly reduce its thermal contact, while simultaneously eliminating dissipation arising from clamping. Through the long coherence times allowed, this approach potentially opens the door to ground-state cooling and coherent manipulation of a single mesoscopic mechanical system or entanglement generation between spatially separate systems, even in room-temperature environments. As an example, we show that these goals should be achievable when the mechanical mode consists of the center-of-mass motion of a levitated nanosphere.


Physical Review A | 2011

Spectral and temporal characterization of a fused-quartz-microresonator optical frequency comb

Scott B. Papp; Scott A. Diddams

We report on the fabrication of high-Q, fused-quartz microresonators and the parametric generation of a frequency comb with 36-GHz line spacing using them. We have characterized the intrinsic stability of the comb in both the time and frequency domains to assess its suitability for future precision metrology applications. Intensity autocorrelation measurements and line-by-line comb control reveal near-transform-limited picosecond pulse trains that are associated with good relative phase and amplitude stability of the comb lines. The combs 36-GHz line spacing can be readily photodetected, which enables measurements of its intrinsic and absolute phase fluctuations.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Short-range force detection using optically cooled levitated microspheres.

Andrew Geraci; Scott B. Papp; John Kitching

We propose an experiment using optically trapped and cooled dielectric micro-spheres for the detection of short-range forces. The center-of-mass motion of a microsphere trapped in vacuum can experience extremely low dissipation and quality factors of 10(12), leading to yoctonewton force sensitivity. Trapping the sphere in an optical field enables positioning at less than 1 μm from a surface, a regime where exotic new forces may exist. We expect that the proposed system could advance the search for non-Newtonian gravity forces via an enhanced sensitivity of 10(5)-10(7) over current experiments at the 1 μm length scale. Moreover, our system may be useful for characterizing other short-range physics such as Casimir forces.


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Bragg Spectroscopy of a Strongly Interacting 85Rb Bose-Einstein Condensate

Scott B. Papp; Juan Pino; Robert Wild; Shai Ronen; Carl E. Wieman; D. S. Jin; Eric A. Cornell

We report on measurements of the excitation spectrum of a strongly interacting Bose-Einstein condensate. A magnetic-field Feshbach resonance is used to tune atom-atom interactions in the condensate and to reach a regime where quantum depletion and beyond mean-field corrections to the condensate chemical potential are significant. We use two-photon Bragg spectroscopy to probe the condensate excitation spectrum; our results demonstrate the onset of beyond mean-field effects in a gaseous Bose-Einstein condensate.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Self-Injection Locking and Phase-Locked States in Microresonator-Based Optical Frequency Combs

Pascal Del’Haye; Katja Beha; Scott B. Papp; Scott A. Diddams

Microresonator-based optical frequency combs have been a topic of extensive research during the last few years. Several theoretical models for the comb generation have been proposed; however, they do not comprehensively address experimental results that show a variety of independent comb generation mechanisms. Here, we present frequency-domain experiments that illuminate the transition of microcombs into phase-locked states, which show characteristics of injection locking between ensembles of comb modes. In addition, we demonstrate the existence of equidistant optical frequency combs that are phase stable but have nondeterministic phase relationships between individual comb modes.


Physical Review Letters | 2006

Observation of Heteronuclear Feshbach Molecules from a 85Rb – 87Rb gas

Scott B. Papp; Carl E. Wieman

We report on the observation of ultracold heteronuclear Feshbach molecules. Starting with a 87Rb Bose-Einstein condensate and a cold atomic gas of 85Rb, we utilize previously unobserved interspecies Feshbach resonances to create up to 25,000 molecules. Even though the 85Rb gas is nondegenerate, we observe a large molecular conversion efficiency due to the presence of a quantum degenerate 87Rb gas; this represents a key feature of our system. We compare the molecule creation at two different Feshbach resonances with different magnetic-field widths. The two Feshbach resonances are located at 265.44+/-0.15 G and 372.4+/-1.3 G. We also directly measure the small binding energy of the molecules through resonant magnetic-field association.


Physical Review Letters | 2001

Pauli Blocking of Collisions in a Quantum Degenerate Atomic Fermi Gas

Brian DeMarco; Scott B. Papp; D. S. Jin

We have produced an interacting quantum degenerate Fermi gas of atoms composed of two spin states of magnetically trapped 40K. The relative Fermi energies are adjusted by controlling the population in each spin state. Thermodynamic measurements reveal a resulting imbalance in the mean energy per particle between the two species, which is a factor of 1.4 at our lowest temperature. This imbalance of energy comes from a suppression of collisions between atoms in the gas due to the Pauli exclusion principle. Through measurements of the thermal relaxation rate we have directly observed this Pauli blocking as a factor of 2 reduction in the effective collision cross section in the quantum degenerate regime.


Optics Express | 2013

Parametric seeding of a microresonator optical frequency comb.

Scott B. Papp; Pascal Del'Haye; Scott A. Diddams

We have investigated parametric seeding of a microresonator frequency comb (microcomb) by way of a pump laser with two electro-optic-modulation sidebands. We show that the pump-sideband spacing is precisely replicated throughout the microcombs optical spectrum, and we demonstrate a record absolute line-spacing stability for microcombs of 1.6 × 10(-13) at 1 s. The spectrum of a microcomb is complex, and often non-equidistant subcombs are observed. Our results demonstrate that parametric seeding can not only control the subcombs, but can lead to the generation of a strictly equidistant microcomb spectrum.


Nature Communications | 2015

Phase steps and resonator detuning measurements in microresonator frequency combs

Pascal Del'Haye; Aurélien Coillet; William Loh; Katja Beha; Scott B. Papp; Scott A. Diddams

Experiments and theoretical modelling yielded significant progress toward understanding of Kerr-effect induced optical frequency comb generation in microresonators. However, the simultaneous Kerr-mediated interaction of hundreds or thousands of optical comb frequencies with the same number of resonator modes leads to complicated nonlinear dynamics that are far from fully understood. An important prerequisite for modelling the comb formation process is the knowledge of phase and amplitude of the comb modes as well as the detuning from their respective microresonator modes. Here, we present comprehensive measurements that fully characterize optical microcomb states. We introduce a way of measuring resonator dispersion and detuning of comb modes in a hot resonator while generating an optical frequency comb. The presented phase measurements show unpredicted comb states with discrete π and π/2 steps in the comb phases that are not observed in conventional optical frequency combs.


Nature | 2010

Entanglement of spin waves among four quantum memories

K. S. Choi; Akihisa Goban; Scott B. Papp; S. J. van Enk; H. J. Kimble

Quantum networks are composed of quantum nodes that interact coherently through quantum channels, and open a broad frontier of scientific opportunities. For example, a quantum network can serve as a ‘web’ for connecting quantum processors for computation and communication, or as a ‘simulator’ allowing investigations of quantum critical phenomena arising from interactions among the nodes mediated by the channels. The physical realization of quantum networks generically requires dynamical systems capable of generating and storing entangled states among multiple quantum memories, and efficiently transferring stored entanglement into quantum channels for distribution across the network. Although such capabilities have been demonstrated for diverse bipartite systems, entangled states have not been achieved for interconnects capable of ‘mapping’ multipartite entanglement stored in quantum memories to quantum channels. Here we demonstrate measurement-induced entanglement stored in four atomic memories; user-controlled, coherent transfer of the atomic entanglement to four photonic channels; and characterization of the full quadripartite entanglement using quantum uncertainty relations. Our work therefore constitutes an advance in the distribution of multipartite entanglement across quantum networks. We also show that our entanglement verification method is suitable for studying the entanglement order of condensed-matter systems in thermal equilibrium.

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Scott A. Diddams

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Daniel C. Cole

University of Colorado Boulder

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Pascal Del'Haye

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Daniel D. Hickstein

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Kartik Srinivasan

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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David R. Carlson

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Kerry J. Vahala

California Institute of Technology

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Nima Nader

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Jordan R. Stone

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Travis C. Briles

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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