Cavity-enhanced Quantum optical Clocks
Q-Clocks
Calls: ERANET cofund
Start date: 2018-03-01 End date: 2021-02-28
Total Budget: EUR 2.364.640,00 INO share of the total budget: EUR 200.475,00
Scientific manager: Filippo Levi and for INO is: Franzosi Roberto
Web Site: Visit Organization/Institution/Company main assignee: INRIM
other Organization/Institution/Company involved:
CNRS / SYRTE – France
ICFO – Spain
Nicolaus Copernicus Univ. in Torun / UMK – Poland
Univ. Copenhagen / KU – Denmark
other INO’s people involved: Franzosi RobertoBel-Hadj-Aissa GhofraneGessner ManuelNourmandipour AlirezaPezzč LucaSmerzi AugustoVafafard Azar
Q-Clocks seeks to establish a new frontier in the quantum measurement of time by joining state-of-the-art optical lattice clocks and the quantized electromagnetic field provided by an optical cavity.
The goal of the project is to apply advanced quantum techniques to state-of-the-art optical lattice clocks, demonstrating enhanced sensitivity while preserving long coherence times and the highest accuracy.
A three-fold atom-cavity system approach will be employed: the dispersive quantum non-demolition (QND) system in the weak coupling regime, the QND system in the strong collective coupling regime, and the quantum enhancement of narrow-linewidth laser light generation towards a continuous active optical frequency standard.
Cross-fertilization of such approaches will be granted by parallel theoretical investigations on the available and brand-new quantum protocols, providing cavity-assisted readout phase amplification, adaptive entanglement and squeezed state preparation protocols.
Novel ideas on quantum state engineering of the clock states inside the optical lattice will be exploited to test possible quantum information and communication applications.
By pushing the performance of optical atomic clocks toward the Heisenberg limit, Q-Clocks is expected to substantially enhance all utilizations of high precision atomic clocks, including tests of fundamental physics (test of the theory of relativity, physics beyond the standard model, variation of fundamental constants, search for dark matter) and applied physics (relativistic geophysics, chrono geodetic leveling, precision geodesy and time tagging in coherent high speed optical communication).
Finally, active optical atomic clocks would have a potential to join large scale laser interferometers in gravitational waves detection.
INO’s Experiments/Theoretical Study correlated:
Quantum entanglement
Microcanonical ensemble
The Scientific Results:
1) Entanglement estimation in non-optimal qubit states2) A microcanonical entropy correcting finite-size effects in small systems3) Entanglement distance for an arbitrary state of M qubits4) On the origin of phase transitions in the absence of symmetry-breaking5) Multipartite Entanglement at Finite Temperature6) Sensitivity Bounds for Multiparameter Quantum Metrology7) Frequentist and Bayesian Quantum Phase Estimation8) Measuring geometric phases with a dynamical quantum Zeno effect in a Bose-Einstein condensate9) Metrological Nonlinear Squeezing Parameter10) Multipartite-entanglement tomography of a quantum simulator11) Fast and optimal generation of entanglement in bosonic Josephson junctions12) Sensitivity bounds for interferometry with Ising Hamiltonians13) Entanglement distance for arbitrary M-qudit hybrid systems14) Geometrical Aspects in the Analysis of Microcanonical Phase-Transitions15) Geometrical and topological study of the Kosterlitz–Thouless phase transition in the XY model in two dimensions16) Transition between Random and Periodic Electron Currents on a DNA Chain17) Energy transfer to the phonons of a macromolecule through light pumping18) Entanglement protection of classically driven qubits in a lossy cavity