3 research outputs found
Anisotropic velocity distributions in 3D dissipative optical lattices
We present a direct measurement of velocity distributions in two dimensions
by using an absorption imaging technique in a 3D near resonant optical lattice.
The results show a clear difference in the velocity distributions for the
different directions. The experimental results are compared with a numerical 3D
semi-classical Monte-Carlo simulation. The numerical simulations are in good
qualitative agreement with the experimental results.Comment: Accepted for publication in Eur. Phys. J., "Special issue: Quantum
fluctuations and coherence in optical and atomic structures" (2003
Non-Gaussian Velocity Distributions in Optical Lattices
We present a detailed experimental study of the velocity distribution of
atoms cooled in an optical lattice. Our results are supported by full-quantum
numerical simulations. Even though the Sisyphus effect, the responsible cooling
mechanism, has been used extensively in many cold atom experiments, no detailed
study of the velocity distribution has been reported previously. For the
experimental as well as for the numerical investigation, it turns out that a
Gaussian function is not the one that best reproduce the data for all
parameters. We also fit the data to alternative functions, such as Lorentzians,
Tsallis functions and double Gaussians. In particular, a double Gaussian
provides a more precise fitting to our results.Comment: Final published version with 12 pages and 12 figure
Experimental Investigation of Three-Dimensional Single and Double optical Lattices
A complete laser cooling setup was built, with focus on threedimensional near-resonant optical lattices for cesium. These consist of regularly ordered micropotentials, created by the interference of four laser beams. One key feature of optical lattices is an inherent ”Sisyphus cooling” process. It efficiently extracts kinetic energy from the atoms, leading to equilibrium temperatures of a few µK. The corresponding kinetic energy is lower than the depth of the potential wells, so that atoms can be trapped. We performed detailed studies of the cooling processes in optical lattices by using the time-of-flight and absorption-imaging techniques. We investigated the dependence of the equilibrium temperature on the optical lattice parameters, such as detuning, optical potential and lattice geometry. The presence of neighbouring transitions in the cesium hyperfine level structure was used to break symmetries in order to identify, which role “red” and “blue” transitions play in the cooling. We also examined the limits for the cooling process in optical lattices, and the possible difference in steady-state velocity distributions for different directions. Moreover, in collaboration with ´Ecole Normale Sup´erieure in Paris, numerical simulations were performed in order to get more insight in the cooling dynamics of optical lattices. Optical lattices can keep atoms almost perfectly isolated from the environment and have therefore been suggested as a platform for a host of possible experiments aimed at coherent quantum manipulations, such as spin-squeezing and the implementation of quantum logic-gates. We developed a novel way to trap two different cesium ground states in two distinct, interpenetrating optical lattices, and to change the distance between sites of one lattice relative to sites of the other lattice. This is a first step towards the implementation of quantum simulation schemes in optical lattices