952 research outputs found
Laser cooling with a single laser beam and a planar diffractor
A planar triplet of diffraction gratings is used to transform a single laser
beam into a four-beam tetrahedral magneto-optical trap. This `flat' pyramid
diffractor geometry is ideal for future microfabrication. We demonstrate the
technique by trapping and subsequently sub-Doppler cooling 87Rb atoms to
30microKelvin.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figure
Spatial interference from well-separated condensates
We use magnetic levitation and a variable-separation dual optical plug to
obtain clear spatial interference between two condensates axially separated by
up to 0.25 mm -- the largest separation observed with this kind of
interferometer. Clear planar fringes are observed using standard (i.e.
non-tomographic) resonant absorption imaging. The effect of a weak inverted
parabola potential on fringe separation is observed and agrees well with
theory.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures - modified to take into account referees'
improvement
Demonstration of an inductively coupled ring trap for cold atoms
We report the first demonstration of an inductively coupled magnetic ring trap for cold atoms. A uniform, ac magnetic field is used to induce current in a copper ring, which creates an opposing magnetic field that is time-averaged to produce a smooth cylindrically symmetric ring trap of radius 5 mm. We use a laser-cooled atomic sample to characterize the loading efficiency and adiabaticity of the magnetic potential, achieving a vacuum-limited lifetime in the trap. This technique is suitable for creating scalable toroidal waveguides for applications in matter-wave interferometry, offering long interaction times and large enclosed areas
Detecting sterile neutrinos with KATRIN like experiments
A sterile neutrino with mass in the eV range, mixing with the electron
antineutrino, is allowed and possibly even preferred by cosmology and
oscillation experiments. If such eV-mass neutrinos exist they provide a much
better target for direct detection in beta decay experiments than the active
neutrinos which are expected to have sub-eV masses. Their relatively high mass
would allow for an easy separation from the primary decay signal in experiments
such as KATRIN.Comment: 23 pages, 7 figures. References & Figures updated. Text reviewed and
revised. Accepted for publication JCA
Utilising diffractive optics towards a compact, cold atom clock
Laser cooled atomic samples have resulted in profound advances in precision metrology [1], however the technology is typically complex and bulky. In recent publications we described a micro-fabricated optical element, that greatly facilitates miniaturisation of ultra-cold atom technology [2], [3], [4], [5]. Portable devices should be feasible with accuracy vastly exceeding that of equivalent room-temperature technology, with a minimal footprint. These laser cooled samples are ideal for atomic clocks. Here we will discuss the implementation of our micro-fabricated diffractive optics towards building a robust, compact cold atom clock
Comparative simulations of Fresnel holography methods for atomic waveguides
We have simulated the optical properties of micro-fabricated Fresnel zone plates (FZPs) as an alternative to spatial light modulators (SLMs) for producing non-trivial light potentials to trap atoms within a lensless Fresnel arrangement. We show that binary (1-bit) FZPs with wavelength (1μm) spatial resolution consistently outperform kinoforms of spatial and phase resolution comparable to commercial SLMs in root mean square error comparisons, with FZP kinoforms demonstrating increasing improvement for complex target intensity distributions. Moreover, as sub-wavelength resolution microfabrication is possible, FZPs provide an exciting possibility for the creation of static cold-atom trapping potentials useful to atomtronics, interferometry, and the study of fundamental physics
- …
