244 research outputs found
Optical frequency measurement of the 1S-3S two-photon transition in hydrogen
This article reports the first optical frequency measurement of the
transition in hydrogen. The excitation of this
transition occurs at a wavelength of 205 nm which is obtained with two
frequency doubling stages of a titanium sapphire laser at 820 nm. Its frequency
is measured with an optical frequency comb. The second-order Doppler effect is
evaluated from the observation of the motional Stark effect due to a transverse
magnetic field perpendicular to the atomic beam. The measured value of the
frequency splitting is with a relative uncertainty of
. After the measurement of the
frequency, this result is the most precise of the optical frequencies in
hydrogen
Compact solid-state laser source for 1S-2S spectroscopy in atomic hydrogen
We demonstrate a novel compact solid-state laser source for high-resolution
two-photon spectroscopy of the transition in atomic hydrogen. The
source emits up to 20 mW at 243 nm and consists of a 972 nm diode laser, a
tapered amplifier, and two doubling stages. The diode laser is actively
stabilized to a high-finesse cavity. We compare the new source to the stable
486 nm dye laser used in previous experiments and record 1S-2S spectra using
both systems. With the solid-state laser system we demonstrate a resolution of
the hydrogen spectrometer of 6 \times 10^{11} which is promising for a number
of high-precision measurements in hydrogen-like systems
Noise sensitivity of an atomic velocity sensor
We use Bloch oscillations to accelerate coherently Rubidium atoms. The
variation of the velocity induced by this acceleration is an integer number
times the recoil velocity due to the absorption of one photon. The measurement
of the velocity variation is achieved using two velocity selective Raman
pi-pulses: the first pulse transfers atoms from the hyperfine state 5S1/2 |F=2,
mF=0> to 5S1/2, |F=1, mF = 0> into a narrow velocity class. After the
acceleration of this selected atomic slice, we apply the second Raman pulse to
bring the resonant atoms back to the initial state 5S1/2, |F=2, mF = 0>. The
populations in (F=1 and F=2) are measured separately by using a one-dimensional
time-of-flight technique. To plot the final velocity distribution we repeat
this procedure by scanning the Raman beam frequency of the second pulse. This
two pi-pulses system constitutes then a velocity sensor. Any noise in the
relative phase shift of the Raman beams induces an error in the measured
velocity. In this paper we present a theoretical and an experimental analysis
of this velocity sensor, which take into account the phase fluctuations during
the Raman pulses
2S hyperfine structure of atomic deuterium
We have measured the frequency splitting between the and hyperfine sublevels in atomic deuterium by an optical differential
method based on two-photon Doppler-free spectroscopy on a cold atomic beam. The
result Hz is the most precise value for
this interval to date. In comparison to the previous radio-frequency
measurement we have improved the accuracy by the factor of three.
The specific combination of hyperfine frequency intervals for metastable- and
ground states in deuterium atom derived from our measurement is in a good agreement with
calculated from quantum-electrodynamics theory.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
High-Precision Optical Measurement of the 2S Hyperfine Interval in Atomic Hydrogen
We have applied an optical method to the measurement of the 2S hyperfine
interval in atomic hydrogen. The interval has been measured by means of
two-photon spectroscopy of the 1S-2S transition on a hydrogen atomic beam
shielded from external magnetic fields. The measured value of the 2S hyperfine
interval is equal to 177 556 860(15) Hz and represents the most precise
measurement of this interval to date. The theoretical evaluation of the
specific combination of 1S and 2S hyperfine intervals D_21 is in moderately
good agreement with the value for D_21 deduced from our measurement
Continuous-wave Doppler-cooling of hydrogen atoms with two-photon transitions
We propose and analyze the possibility of performing two-photon
continuous-wave Doppler-cooling of hydrogen atoms using the 1S-2S transition.
"Quenching" of the 2S level (by coupling with the 2P state) is used to increase
the cycling frequency, and to control the equilibrium temperature. Theoretical
and numerical studies of the heating effect due to Doppler-free two-photon
transitions evidence an increase of the temperature by a factor of two. The
equilibrium temperature decreases with the effective (quenching dependent)
width of the excited state and can thus be adjusted up to values close to the
recoil temperature.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures in eps forma
Photoionization Broadening of the 1S-2S Transition in a Beam of Atomic Hydrogen
We consider the excitation dynamics of the two-photon \sts transition in a
beam of atomic hydrogen by 243 nm laser radiation. Specifically, we study the
impact of ionization damping on the transition line shape, caused by the
possibility of ionization of the 2S level by the same laser field. Using a
Monte-Carlo simulation, we calculate the line shape of the \sts transition for
the experimental geometry used in the two latest absolute frequency
measurements (M. Niering {\it et al.}, PRL 84, 5496 (2000) and M. Fischer {\it
et al.}, PRL 92, 230802 (2004)). The calculated line shift and line width are
in excellent agreement with the experimentally observed values. From this
comparison we can verify the values of the dynamic Stark shift coefficient for
the \sts transition for the first time on a level of 15%. We show that the
ionization modifies the velocity distribution of the metastable atoms, the line
shape of the \sts transition, and has an influence on the derivation of its
absolute frequency.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Theoretical Analysis of a Large Momentum Beamsplitter using Bloch Oscillations
In this paper, we present the implementation of Bloch oscillations in an
atomic interferometer to increase the separation of the two interfering paths.
A numerical model, in very good agreement with the experiment, is developed.
The contrast of the interferometer and its sensitivity to phase fluctuations
and to intensity fluctuations are also calculated. We demonstrate that the
sensitivity to phase fluctuations can be significantly reduced by using a
suitable arrangement of Bloch oscillations pulses
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