80 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
Femtosecond synchronously in-well pumped vertical-external-cavity surface-emitting laser
We demonstrate the first synchronously in-well pumped vertical-external-cavity surface-emitting laser (VECSEL). Depending on the cavity mismatch, laser pulses with a duration from 1 ps to 7 ps at a repetition rate of 76 MHz were generated directly from the laser at 860 nm. The application of extra-cavity pulse compression further shortened the pulse to a duration of 210 fs providing a peak power of 226 W
Measurement of the relativistic Doppler shift in neon
The relativistic Doppler shift is measured by the counting of the frequency difference between two cw dye lasers. One laser is locked to a two-photon transition in a fast beam of neon, and the other is locked to the same two-photon transition in thermal neon. The experimental result is compared to the prediction of special relativity. The result is in excellent agreement with this theory. An accuracy of 4x10exp-5 is obtained, which provides the most accurate direct verification of time dilatation to date.Peer reviewe
Two-photon laser scanning fluorescence microscopy using photonic crystal fibre
We report the application of a simple yet powerful modular pulse compression system, based on photonic crystal fibres which improves upon incumbent twophoton laser scanning fluorescence microscopy techniques. This system provided more than a 7-fold increase in fluorescence yield when compared with a commercial two-photon microscopy system. From this, we infer pulses of infrared radiaton of less than 35 fs duration reaching the sample
Practical Doppler broadening thermometry
We report initial research to develop a compact and practical primary
thermometer based on Doppler broadening thermometry (DBT). The DBT sensor uses
an intrinsic property of thermalized atoms, namely, the Doppler width of a
spectral line characteristic of the atoms being probed. The DBT sensor, being
founded on a primary thermometry approach, requires no calibration or
reference, and so in principle could achieve reliable long-term in-situ
thermodynamic temperature measurement. Here we describe our approach and report
on initial proof-of-concept investigations with alkali metal vapour cells. Our
focus is to develop long-term stable thermometers based on DBT that can be used
to reliably measure temperatures for long periods and in environments where
sensor retrieval for re-calibration is impractical such as in nuclear waste
storage facilities.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, referees' comments incorporate
A Digital Alkali Spin Maser
Self-oscillating atomic magnetometers, in which the precession of atomic
spins in a magnetic field is driven by resonant modulation, offer high
sensitivity and dynamic range. Phase-coherent feedback from the detected signal
to the applied modulation creates a resonant spin maser system, highly
responsive to changes in the background magnetic field. Here we show a system
in which the phase condition for resonant precession is met by digital signal
processing integrated into the maser feedback loop. This system uses a modest
chip-scale laser and mass-produced dual-pass caesium vapour cell and operates
in a 50 microtesla field, making it a suitable technology for portable
measurements of the geophysical magnetic field. We demonstrate a Cramer-Rao
lower bound-limited resolution of 50 fT at 1 s sampling cadence, and a sensor
bandwidth of 10 kHz. This device also represents an important class of atomic
system in which low-latency digital processing forms an integral part of a
coherently-driven quantum system.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
Single-laser, one beam, tetrahedral magneto-optical trap
We have realised a 4-beam pyramidal magneto-optical trap ideally suited for
future microfabrication. Three mirrors split and steer a single incoming beam
into a tripod of reflected beams, allowing trapping in the four-beam overlap
volume. We discuss the influence of mirror angle on cooling and trapping,
finding optimum efficiency in a tetrahedral configuration. We demonstrate the
technique using an ex-vacuo mirror system to illustrate the previously
inaccessible supra-plane pyramid MOT configuration. Unlike standard pyramidal
MOTs both the pyramid apex and its mirror angle are non-critical and our MOT
offers improved molasses free from atomic shadows in the laser beams. The MOT
scheme naturally extends to a 2-beam refractive version with high optical
access. For quantum gas experiments, the mirror system could also be used for a
stable 3D tetrahedral optical lattice.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, 2 movie
Orientational effects on the amplitude and phase of polarimeter signals in double resonance atomic magnetometry
Double resonance optically pumped magnetometry can be used to measure static magnetic fields with high sensitivity by detecting a resonant atomic spin response to a small oscillating field perturbation. Determination of the resonant frequency yields a scalar measurement of static field (B_0) magnitude. We present calculations and experimental data showing that the on-resonance polarimeter signal of light transmitted through an atomic vapour in arbitrarily oriented may be modelled by considering the evolution of alignment terms in atomic polarisation. We observe that the amplitude and phase of the magnetometer signal are highly dependent upon B_0 orientation, and present precise measurements of the distribution of these parameters over the full 4 pi solid angle
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