Coriolis compensation via gravity in a matter-wave interferometer

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Abstract

Matter-wave interferometry offers insights into fundamental physics and provides a precise tool for sensing. Improving the sensitivity of such experiments requires increasing the time particles spend in the interferometer, which can lead to dephasing in the presence of velocity-dependent phase shifts such as those produced by the Earth's rotation. Here we present a technique to passively compensate for the Coriolis effect using gravity, without the need for any moving components. We demonstrate the technique with fullerenes in a long-baseline molecule interferometer by measuring the gravitational and Coriolis phase shifts and obtaining the maximum visibility one would expect in the absence of the Coriolis effect.

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Fein, Y. Y., Kiałka, F., Geyer, P., Gerlich, S., & Arndt, M. (2020). Coriolis compensation via gravity in a matter-wave interferometer. New Journal of Physics, 22(3). https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/ab73c5

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