http://www.nanotech-now.com/news.cgi?story_id=39868
Abstract:
Scientists have developed a novel design for a highly compact, ultra-sensitive 
quantum device to measure subtle changes in gravity over very short time or 
distance scales.*

A New Design for a Gravimeter 
College Park, MD | Posted on September 1st, 2010 
Tools of this sort - called atom interferometers (AIs) - are now used to search 
for natural resources beneath the Earth's surface, navigate deep underwater or 
in the air, and measure Newton's gravitational constant to extraordinary 
precision. But the new design, by researchers from the Joint Quantum Institute 
and its Physics Frontier Center, offers the possibility of unprecedented 
temporal resolution by harnessing the very recently demonstrated ability to 
create "synthetic" magnetic fields.

"The ability to measure gravity over fine time scales will help in finding oil 
fields and mineral deposits," says coauthor and JQI Fellow Victor Galitski. 
"Imagine an aircraft flying over an unexplored area. If heavy element deposits 
are hidden underneath, the gravimeter will react promptly by showing strong 
fluctuations in the local gravity field."

Atom interferometers rely on a counterintuitive but central precept of quantum 
mechanics: Everything, including matter - not just subatomic particles, atoms 
and molecules, but also macroscopic objects such as Buicks and buildings - has 
wave properties. Just like waves of light or sound, "matter waves" from 
different objects can interfere with one another constructively (reinforcement) 
or destructively (cancellation).

In addition, the new design takes advantage of yet another quantum phenomenon: 
"superposition," a condition in which objects have multiple values of the same 
property at the same time - the equivalent, in the classical world, of a ball 
that is simultaneously completely red and completely blue until someone looks 
at it. Once it is seen (or measured in any other way), however, the 
superposition disappears and the ball becomes either red or blue.

Conventional AIs exploit interference to measure gravity at a given location, 
typically by directing a stream of atoms into a beamsplitter, which divides the 
atoms' wave functions into two branches. Inside the device, each branch is 
propelled on separate - but completely symmetrical, mirror-image - paths down a 
cylinder. The only difference between the paths is that one is higher than the 
other - and therefore responds just slightly differently to the force of 
gravity. So when the two atom branches are recombined, their matter waves will 
be out of phase; and the amount of phase difference will be proportional to the 
difference in gravitational force felt by each.

Although useful, that method does not provide a good way to measure how 
gravitational force changes over small time periods and short length scales. 
And it necessarily requires the atoms to travel a relatively large distance, 
typically tens of centimeters, in order to produce a sufficiently large phase 
difference.

The JQI/PFC design, by contrast, uses an atom trap only 50 micrometers in 
diameter - about half the thickness of a human hair - containing millions of 
atoms chilled to a fraction of a degree above absolute zero. The atoms sit in a 
weak, inhomogeneous magnetic field, and each has a slightly different spin 
state (a kind of angular momentum) depending on its position in the field. The 
atoms are irradiated by a continuous-wave laser that imparts momentum to each 
atom, the magnitude and direction of which depends on the atom's spin state. 
This arrangement produces "synthetic" magnetism,** a condition which causes 
neutral atoms to behave as if they were charged particles in a real magnetic 
field.

"Recently, JQI researchers led by Ian Spielman have demonstrated that a 
synthetic magnetic field and synthetic spin can be created in cold-atom 
systems," says coauthor and JQI Fellow Jacob Taylor of the National Institute 
of Standards and Technology. "The proposed gravimeter setup is largely inspired 
by these amazing advances, and it uses the simplest possible configuration of 
replicas of a uniform synthetic field, which can be created easily in 
Spielman's experiment."

Then each atom is exposed to microwave radiation tuned to the specific 
wavelength that will project it into a "superposition" of two opposite spin 
states. [See Step 1 in the attached figure.] At that point, the trap is 
displaced by a small amount, about 20 micrometers, which has the effect of 
moving the atom, with its superposed states, into a different part of the 
synthetic field. [Step 2 in the figure.] Each of the two spin states starts to 
move in a spiral motion, but in opposite directions around the interior of the 
trap. [Step 3 in the illustration, also depicted in the short movie.] While in 
transit, each superposition state will be affected differently by gravity or 
any other acceleration. As a result, when their paths once again overlap at the 
end of their spiral trajectories, they will be slightly out of phase.

Finally, the atom is irradiated with a second microwave pulse [Step 4] that 
causes the atom to emit light if it is in a certain spin state, and to remain 
"dark" (no emission) if it is in another. If the superposed spin states had not 
experienced any external effects, such as gravity, each atom in the trap would 
have a 50-percent chance of emitting or not emitting. But if the paths of the 
spin states are affected by gravity, the collective output of the entire set of 
trapped atoms will emit more or less light - and the degree to which the light 
output varies is a measure of the strength of the gravitational field.

In addition to its potential practical uses, the new design can help test the 
fundamental laws of nature, such as Einstein's theory of relativity, which some 
believe maybreak down at very small time and length scales.

* "Interferometry with Synthetic Gauge Fields," B. M. Anderson, J. M. Taylor, 
and V. M. Galitski, arxiv.org/abs/1008.3910 

** "Synthetic magnetic fields for ultracold neutral atoms," Y.-J. Lin, R.L. 
Compton, K. Jimenez-Garcia, J.V. Porto and I.B. Spielman, Nature 462, 628 
(2009). 


http://www.nanotech-now.com/news.cgi?story_id=39868

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