Measuring the Rydberg Constant Using Circular Rydberg Atoms in an Intensity-Modulated Optical Lattice

Abstract

A method for performing a precision measurement of the Rydberg constant, R∞, using cold circular Rydberg atoms is proposed. These states have long lifetimes, as well as negligible quantum-electrodynamics (QED) and no nuclear-overlap corrections. Due to these advantages, the measurement can help solve the "proton radius puzzle" [Bernauer, Pohl, Sci. Am. 310, 32 (2014)]. The atoms are trapped using a Rydberg-atom optical lattice, and transitions are driven using a recently-demonstrated lattice-modulation technique to perform Doppler-free spectroscopy. The circular-state transition frequency yields R∞. Laser wavelengths and beam geometries are selected such that the lattice-induced transition shift is minimized. The selected transitions have no first-order Zeeman and Stark corrections, leaving only manageable second-order Zeeman and Stark shifts. For Rb, the projected relative uncertainty of R∞ in a measurement under the presence of the Earth's gravity is 10-11, with the main contribution coming from the residual lattice shift. This could be reduced in a future micro-gravity implementation. The next-important systematic arises from the Rb+ polarizability (relative-uncertainty contribution of ≈ 3 ×10-12).

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