2011
DOI: 10.1364/oe.19.003106
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First-order cancellation of the Cs clock frequency temperature-dependence in Ne-Ar buffer gas mixture

Abstract: Through the detection of Coherent Population Trapping (CPT) resonances, we demonstrate the temperature-dependence cancellation of the Cs clock frequency in microfabricated vapor cells filled with a mixture of Ne and Ar. The inversion temperature at which the Cs clock frequency temperature sensitivity is greatly reduced only depends on the partial pressure of buffer gases and is measured to be lower than 80 • C as expected with simple theoretical calculations. These results are important for the development of … Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…One can also cancel the temperature dependence at a chosen temperature by a mixture of gases with temperature coefficients of opposite signs [10,40].…”
Section: B Procedures and Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One can also cancel the temperature dependence at a chosen temperature by a mixture of gases with temperature coefficients of opposite signs [10,40].…”
Section: B Procedures and Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The term microvesicle, denoting lipid-membrane-enclosed extracellular particles, goes back (debatably) at least as far as the original EVs, the neuronal synaptic vesicles (22). There has been a trend in the EV field to reserve the term microvesicle for membrane particles released (described variously as shed, blebbed, exfoliated, or exocytosed) directly from the cell’s plasma membrane (39); early publications noted the plasma membrane as the source of these vesiculations (11, 165). The term ectosome, originally used to describe the cortical portion of sponges (12), is also used in reference to vesicles that are directly assembled and released at the plasma membrane (18) and provides another source of confusion (18).…”
Section: Extracellular Vesicles: a Brief And Incomplete History Of Nomentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They are typically additionally filled with a few ten to a few hundred mbar of buffer gas(es) in order to reduce the atomic resonance linewidth through the Lamb–Dicke effect by reducing the mean freepath of alkali atoms. 14 As a side effect, buffer gas(es) produce an undesired temperature-dependent shift of the clock frequency due to dephasing interactions between the alkali atoms and the buffer gas atoms or molecules. This frequency shift is typically described within the operation temperature range by a second order temperature dependent relation, 15 the sign of which varies according to the specific buffer gas species.…”
Section: Measured Devicesmentioning
confidence: 99%