105 research outputs found
Excitations in a non-equilibrium Bose-Einstein condensate of exciton-polaritons
We have developed a mean-field model to describe the dynamics of a
non-equilibrium Bose-Einstein condensate of exciton-polaritons in a
semiconductor microcavity. The spectrum of elementary excitations around the
stationary state is analytically studied in different geometries. A diffusive
behaviour of the Goldstone mode is found in the spatially homogeneous case and
new features are predicted for the Josephson effect in a two-well geometry.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Laser phase noise effects on the dynamics of optomechanical resonators
We investigate theoretically the influence of laser phase noise on the
cooling and heating of a generic cavity optomechanical system. We derive the
back-action damping and heating rates and the mechanical frequency shift of the
radiation pressure-driven oscillating mirror, and derive the minimum phonon
occupation number for small laser linewidths. We find that in practice laser
phase noise does not pose serious limitations to ground state cooling. We then
consider the effects of laser phase noise in a parametric cavity driving scheme
that minimizes the back-action heating of one of the quadratures of the
mechanical oscillator motion. Laser linewidths narrow compared to the decay
rate of the cavity field will not pose any problems in an experimental setting,
but broader linewidths limit the practicality of this back-action evasion
method.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
Directional `superradiant' collisions: bosonic amplification of atom pairs emitted from an elongated Bose-Einstein condensate
We study spontaneous directionality in the bosonic amplification of atom
pairs emitted from an elongated Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC), an effect
analogous to `superradiant' emission of atom-photon pairs. Using a simplified
model, we make analytic predictions regarding directional effects for both
atom-atom and atom-photon emission. These are confirmed by numerical mean-field
simulations, demonstrating the the feasibility of nearly perfect directional
emission along the condensate axis. The dependence of the emission angle on the
pump strength for atom-atom pairs is significantly different than for
atom-photon pairs
Spontaneous Emission in ultra-cold spin-polarised anisotropic Fermi Seas
We examine and explain the spatial emission patterns of ultracold excited
fermions in anisotropic trapping potentials in the presence of a spin polarised
Fermi sea of ground state atoms. Due to the Pauli principle, the Fermi sea
modifies the available phase space for the recoiling atom and thereby modifies
its decay rate and the probability of the emitted photon's direction. We show
that the spatial anisotropies are due to an intricate interplay between Fermi
energies and degeneracy values of specific energy levels and identify a regime
in which the emission will become completely directional. Our results are
relevant for recent advances in trapping and manipulating cold fermionic
samples experimentally and give an example of a conceptually new idea for a
directional photon source.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
Observation of persistent flow of a Bose-Einstein condensate in a toroidal trap
We have observed the persistent flow of Bose-condensed atoms in a toroidal
trap. The flow persists without decay for up to 10 s, limited only by
experimental factors such as drift and trap lifetime. The quantized rotation
was initiated by transferring one unit, , of the orbital angular
momentum from Laguerre-Gaussian photons to each atom. Stable flow was only
possible when the trap was multiply-connected, and was observed with a BEC
fraction as small as 15%. We also created flow with two units of angular
momentum, and observed its splitting into two singly-charged vortices when the
trap geometry was changed from multiply- to simply-connected.Comment: 1 file, 5 figure
Transport of Atom Packets in a Train of Ioffe-Pritchard Traps
We demonstrate transport and evaporative cooling of several atomic clouds in
a chain of magnetic Ioffe-Pritchard traps moving at a low speed (~m/s). The
trapping scheme relies on the use of a magnetic guide for transverse
confinement and of magnets fixed on a conveyor belt for longitudinal trapping.
This experiment introduces a new approach for parallelizing the production of
Bose-Einstein condensates as well as for the realization of a continuous atom
laser
Observation of a 2D Bose-gas: from thermal to quasi-condensate to superfluid
We present experimental results on a Bose gas in a quasi-2D geometry near the
Berezinskii, Kosterlitz and Thouless (BKT) transition temperature. By measuring
the density profile, \textit{in situ} and after time of flight, and the
coherence length, we identify different states of the gas. In particular, we
observe that the gas develops a bimodal distribution without long range order.
In this state, the gas presents a longer coherence length than the thermal
cloud; it is quasi-condensed but is not superfluid. Experimental evidence
indicates that we observe the superfluid transition (BKT transition).Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Cold atom confinement in an all-optical dark ring trap
We demonstrate confinement of Rb atoms in a dark, toroidal optical
trap. We use a spatial light modulator to convert a single blue-detuned
Gaussian laser beam to a superposition of Laguerre-Gaussian modes that forms a
ring-shaped intensity null bounded harmonically in all directions. We measure a
1/e spin-relaxation lifetime of ~1.5 seconds for a trap detuning of 4.0 nm. For
smaller detunings, a time-dependent relaxation rate is observed. We use these
relaxation rate measurements and imaging diagnostics to optimize trap alignment
in a programmable manner with the modulator. The results are compared with
numerical simulations.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
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