Abstract

We demonstrate and study a microcell microwave atomic clock based on optical-microwave double resonance (DR) interrogation operated in a pulsed Ramsey scheme, called the \ensuremath{\mu}POP clock, based on a microfabricated Rb vapor cell and a micro-loop-gap microwave resonator. For the mm-scale dimensions of this cell, the population and coherence relaxation rates of the Rb clock transition are on the order of 4--5 kHz, which puts constraints on the useful Ramsey times and overall pulse sequence in view of optimized clock performance. Our proof-of-principle demonstration of the \ensuremath{\mu}POP clock shows that the pulsed DR approach is nevertheless feasible and results in a short-term clock stability of 1 \ifmmode\times\else\texttimes\fi{} ${10}^{\ensuremath{-}11}$ \ensuremath{\tau}${}^{\ensuremath{-}1/2}$ and reaching the \ensuremath{\le}2 \ifmmode\times\else\texttimes\fi{} ${10}^{\ensuremath{-}12}$ level at timescales of 1000 s to one day. The short-term instability budget established for the \ensuremath{\mu}POP clock shows that the main limitation to the short-term stability arises from the detection noise. Thanks to the pulsed Ramsey scheme, light-shift effects are strongly reduced in the \ensuremath{\mu}POP clock, which opens perspectives for further improvements of long-term clock stability, in view of future generations of miniature vapor-cell clocks with enhanced performances based on the DR scheme.

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