Abstract

Optical cavities are widely used to enhance the interaction between atoms and light. Typical designs using a geometrically symmetric structure in the near-concentric regime face a tradeoff between mechanical stability and high single-atom cooperativity. To overcome this limitation, we design and implement a geometrically asymmetric standing-wave cavity. This structure, with mirrors of very different radii of curvature, allows strong atom-light coupling while exhibiting good stability against misalignment. We observe effective cooperativities ranging from $\eta_{\rm eff}=10$ to $\eta_{\rm eff}=0.2$ by shifting the location of the atoms in the cavity mode. By loading $^{171}$Yb atoms directly from a mirror magneto-optical trap into a one-dimensional optical lattice along the cavity mode, we produce atomic ensembles with collective cooperativities up to $N\eta=2\times 10^4$. This system opens a way to preparing spin squeezing for an optical lattice clock and to accessing a range of nonclassical collective states.

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