506 research outputs found
Modification of energy shifts of atoms by the presence of a boundary in a thermal bath and the Casimir-Polder force
We study the modification by the presence of a plane wall of energy level
shifts of two-level atoms which are in multipolar coupling with quantized
electromagnetic fields in a thermal bath in a formalism which separates the
contributions of thermal fluctuations and radiation reaction and allows a
distinct treatment to atoms in the ground and excited states. The position
dependent energy shifts give rise to an induced force acting on the atoms. We
are able to identify three different regimes where the force shows distinct
features and examine, in all regimes, the behaviors of this force in both the
low temperature limit and the high temperature limit for both the ground state
and excited state atoms, thus providing some physical insights into the
atom-wall interaction at finite temperature. In particular, we show that both
the magnitude and the direction of the force acting on an atom may have a clear
dependence on atomic the polarization directions. In certain cases, a change of
relative ratio of polarizations in different directions may result in a change
of direction of the force.Comment: 29 pages, 3 figure
Periodically-driven quantum matter: the case of resonant modulations
Quantum systems can show qualitatively new forms of behavior when they are
driven by fast time-periodic modulations. In the limit of large driving
frequency, the long-time dynamics of such systems can often be described by a
time-independent effective Hamiltonian, which is generally identified through a
perturbative treatment. Here, we present a general formalism that describes
time-modulated physical systems, in which the driving frequency is large, but
resonant with respect to energy spacings inherent to the system at rest. Such a
situation is currently exploited in optical-lattice setups, where superlattice
(or Wannier-Stark-ladder) potentials are resonantly modulated so as to control
the tunneling matrix elements between lattice sites, offering a powerful method
to generate artificial fluxes for cold-atom systems. The formalism developed in
this work identifies the basic ingredients needed to generate interesting flux
patterns and band structures using resonant modulations. Additionally, our
approach allows for a simple description of the micro-motion underlying the
dynamics; we illustrate its characteristics based on diverse dynamic-lattice
configurations. It is shown that the impact of the micro-motion on physical
observables strongly depends on the implemented scheme, suggesting that a
theoretical description in terms of the effective Hamiltonian alone is
generally not sufficient to capture the full time-evolution of the system.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures; includes a new Section III dedicated to the
strong-driving regim
Sub-Doppler laser cooling of potassium atoms
We investigate sub-Doppler laser cooling of bosonic potassium isotopes, whose
small hyperfine splitting has so far prevented cooling below the Doppler
temperature. We find instead that the combination of a dark optical molasses
scheme that naturally arises in this kind of systems and an adiabatic ramping
of the laser parameters allows to reach sub-Doppler temperatures for small
laser detunings. We demonstrate temperatures as low as 25(3)microK and
47(5)microK in high-density samples of the two isotopes 39K and 41K,
respectively. Our findings will find application to other atomic systems.Comment: 7 pages, 9 figure
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BOAT: Building auto-tuners with structured Bayesian optimization
Due to their complexity, modern systems expose many con-figuration parameters which users must tune to maximizeperformance. Auto-tuning has emerged as an alternative inwhich a black-box optimizer iteratively evaluates configura-tions to find efficient ones. Unfortunately, for many systems,such as distributed systems, evaluating performance takestoo long and the space of configurations is too large for theoptimizer to converge within a reasonable tim
Spin-orbit coupling and Berry phase with ultracold atoms in 2D optical lattices
We show how spin-orbit coupling and Berry phase can appear in two-dimensional
optical lattices by coupling atoms' internal degrees of freedom to radiation.
The Rashba Hamiltonian, a standard description of spin-orbit coupling for
two-dimensional electrons, is obtained for the atoms under certain
circumstances. We discuss the possibility of observing associated phenomena,
such as the anomalous Hall and spin Hall effects, with cold atoms in optical
lattices.Comment: 3 figure
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