7,358 research outputs found
Coherent manipulation of cold Rydberg atoms near the surface of an atom chip
Coherent superpositions of the 49s and 48s Rydberg states of cold Rb atoms
were studied near the surface of an atom chip. The superpositions were created
and manipulated using microwaves resonant with the two-photon 49s-48s
transition. Coherent behavior was observed using Rabi flopping, Ramsey
sequences, spin-echo and spin-locking. These results are discussed in the
context of Rydberg atoms as electric field noise sensors. We consider the
coherence of systems quadratically coupled to noise fields with 1/f^k power
spectral densities (k \approx 1).Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
Resonant electric dipole-dipole interactions between cold Rydberg atoms in a magnetic field
Laser cooled Rb atoms were optically excited to 46d Rydberg states. A
microwave pulse transferred a fraction of the atoms to the 47p Rydberg state.
The resonant electric dipole-dipole interactions between atoms in these two
states were probed using the linewidth of the two-photon microwave transition
46d-47d. The presence of a weak magnetic field (approximately 0.5 G) reduced
the observed line broadening, indicating that the interaction is suppressed by
the field. The field removes some of the energy degeneracies responsible for
the resonant interaction, and this is the basis for a quantitative model of the
resulting suppression. A technique for the calibration of magnetic field
strengths using the 34s-34p one-photon transition is also presented.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review
A revised inventory of Antarctic subglacial lakes
The locations and details of 145 Antarctic subglacial lakes are presented. The inventory is based on a former catalogue of lake-type features, which has been subsequently reanalysed, and on the results from three additional datasets. The first is from Italian radio-echo sounding (RES) of the Dome C region of East Antarctica, from which 14 new lakes are identified. These data also show that, in a number of occasions, multiple take-type reflectors thought previously to be individual lakes are in fact reflections from the same relatively large take. This reduces the former total of lake-type reflectors by six, but also adds a significant level of information to these particular lakes. The second dataset is from a Russian survey of the Dome A and Dome F regions of East Antarctica, which provides evidence of 18 new lakes and extends the coverage of the inventory considerably. The third dataset comprises three airborne RES surveys under-taken by the US in East Antarctica over the last five years, from which forty three new lakes have been identified. Reference to information on Lake Vostok, from Italian and US surveys taken in the last few years, is now included
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