162 research outputs found
Mach-Zehnder Bragg interferometer for a Bose-Einstein Condensate
We construct a Mach-Zehnder interferometer using Bose-Einstein condensed
rubidium atoms and optical Bragg diffraction. In contrast to interferometers
based on normal diffraction, where only a small percentage of the atoms
contribute to the signal, our Bragg diffraction interferometer uses all the
condensate atoms. The condensate coherence properties and high phase-space
density result in an interference pattern of nearly 100% contrast. In
principle, the enclosed area of the interferometer may be arbitrarily large,
making it an ideal tool that could be used in the detection of vortices, or
possibly even gravitational waves.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, Quantum Electronics and Laser Science Conference
1999, Postdeadline papers QPD12-
Sequential superradiant scattering from atomic Bose-Einstein condensates
We theoretically discuss several aspects of sequential superradiant
scattering from atomic Bose-Einstein condensates. Our treatment is based on the
semiclassical description of the process in terms of the Maxwell-Schroedinger
equations for the coupled matter-wave and optical fields. First, we investigate
sequential scattering in the weak-pulse regime and work out the essential
mechanisms responsible for bringing about the characteristic fan-shaped
side-mode distribution patterns. Second, we discuss the transition between the
Kapitza-Dirac and Bragg regimes of sequential scattering in the strong-pulse
regime. Finally, we consider the situation where superradiance is initiated by
coherently populating an atomic side mode through Bragg diffraction, as in
studies of matter-wave amplification, and describe the effect on the sequential
scattering process.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures. Submitted to Proceedings of LPHYS'06 worksho
Cold atoms in a high-Q ring-cavity
We report the confinement of large clouds of ultra-cold 85-Rb atoms in a
standing-wave dipole trap formed by the two counter-propagating modes of a
high-Q ring-cavity. Studying the properties of this trap we demonstrate loading
of higher-order transverse cavity modes and excite recoil-induced resonances.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Dynamics of Fermionic Four-Wave Mixing
We study the dynamics of a beam of fermions diffracted off a density grating
formed by fermionic atoms in the limit of a large grating. An exact description
of the system in terms of particle-hole operators is developed. We use a
combination of analytical and numerical methods to quantitatively explore the
Raman-Nath and the Bragg regimes of diffraction. We discuss the limits in
diffraction efficiency resulting from the dephasing of the grating due the
distribution of energy states occupied by the fermions. We propose several
methods to overcome these limits, including the novel technique of ``atom
echoes''.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Recoil-Induced-Resonances in Nonlinear, Ground-State, Pump-Probe Spectroscopy
A theory of pump-probe spectroscopy is developed in which optical fields
drive two-photon Raman transitions between ground states of an ensemble of
three-level atoms. Effects related to the recoil the atoms undergo
as a result of their interactions with the fields are fully accounted for in
this theory. The linear absorption coefficient of a weak probe field in the
presence of two pump fields of arbitrary strength is calculated. For subrecoil
cooled atoms, the spectrum consists of eight absorption lines and eight
emission lines. In the limit that , where and
are the Rabi frequencies of the two pump fields, one recovers the
absorption spectrum for a probe field interacting with an effective two-level
atom in the presence of a single pump field. However when , new interference effects arise that allow one to selectively turn on
and off some of these recoil induced resonances.Comment: 30 pages, 8 figures. RevTex. Submitted to Phys. Rev. A, Revised
versio
Dynamics of rotating Bose-Einstein condensates probed by Bragg scattering
Gaseous Bose-Einstein condensates (BECs) have become an important test bed
for studying the dynamics of quantized vortices. In this work we use two-photon
Doppler sensitive Bragg scattering to study the rotation of sodium BECs. We
analyze the microscopic flow field and present laboratory measurements of the
coarse-grained velocity profile. Unlike time-of-flight imaging, Bragg
scattering is sensitive to the direction of rotation and therefore to the phase
of the condensate. In addition, we have non-destructively probed the vortex
flow field using a sequence of two Bragg pulses.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures. Invited paper submitted to a special issue on
"Nonlinear Waves" of the (Elsevier) journal 'Math. Comput. Simul.', for
participants in the 4th IMACS International Conference on Nonlinear Evolution
Equations and Wave Phenomena (2005). Visit our website at
http://www.physics.gatech.edu/chandra for additional informatio
Bragg spectroscopy with an accelerating Bose-Einstein condensate
We present the results of Bragg spectroscopy performed on an accelerating
Bose-Einstein condensate. The Bose condensate undergoes circular micro-motion
in a magnetic TOP trap and the effect of this motion on the Bragg spectrum is
analyzed. A simple frequency modulation model is used to interpret the observed
complex structure, and broadening effects are considered using numerical
solutions to the Gross-Pitaevskii equation.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, to appear in PRA. Minor changes to text and fig
Time-dependent tunneling of Bose-Einstein condensates
The influence of atomic interactions on time-dependent tunneling processes of
Bose-Einstein condensates is investigated. In a variety of contexts the
relevant condensate dynamics can be described by a Landau-Zener equation
modified by the appearance of nonlinear contributions. Based on this equation
it is discussed how the interactions modify the tunneling probability. In
particular, it is shown that for certain parameter values, due to a nonlinear
hysteresis effect, complete adiabatic population transfer is impossible however
slowly the resonance is crossed. The results also indicate that the
interactions can cause significant increase as well as decrease of tunneling
probabilities which should be observable in currently feasible experiments.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Resolved diffraction patterns from a reflection grating for atoms
We have studied atomic diffraction at normal incidence from an evanescent
standing wave with a high resolution using velocity selective Raman
transitions. We have observed up to 3 resolved orders of diffraction, which are
well accounted for by a scalar diffraction theory. In our experiment the
transverse coherence length of the source is greater than the period of the
diffraction grating.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Generating entangled atom-photon pairs from Bose-Einstein condensates
We propose using spontaneous Raman scattering from an optically driven
Bose-Einstein condensate as a source of atom-photon pairs whose internal states
are maximally entangled. Generating entanglement between a particle which is
easily transmitted (the photon) and one which is easily trapped and coherently
manipulated (an ultracold atom) will prove useful for a variety of
quantum-information related applications. We analyze the type of entangled
states generated by spontaneous Raman scattering and construct a geometry which
results in maximum entanglement
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