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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing
Quantum Foundations
Extending the fundamental limit of atomic clock stability
arXiv
Authors: Ravid Shaniv, Ayush Agrawal, David B. Hume
Year
2026
Paper ID
38744
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
224
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Optical atomic clocks have been rapidly developing in recent decades, resulting in major improvements in both precision and accuracy. As a result, they have become instrumental in multiple areas of applied and fundamental research. Despite all atomic frequency references having more than two energy-levels, the commonly used model for evaluating their ultimate limits assumes a two-level atom. This leads to frequency interrogation protocols and theoretical stability bounds that are suboptimal for a true multi-level atom. The most fundamental stability bound assumes two noise sources - quantum projection noise and spontaneous decay from the excited state. In this work, we analyze a model that includes these noise types and is generalized beyond the two-level assumption, where spontaneous decay can branch to more than a single ground state. This model allows for detection and exclusion of atomic frequency interrogations in which the atom decayed, leading to a frequency stability improvement of up to approx 4.5 dB compared with the two-level model. Furthermore, we identify an even greater stability enhancement of approx 5.4 dB for frequency comparisons between atoms in an odd parity Bell state. These enhancements are particularly relevant for the numerous trapped-ion optical clock species that operate close to lifetime-limited stability. We calculate new stability limits for those cases and provide a detailed experimental protocol for frequency interrogation with an 27Al+ optical ion clock.
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Quantum Foundations research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
- It adds a 2026 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- Optical atomic clocks have been rapidly developing in recent decades, resulting in major improvements in both precision and accuracy.
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