40 research outputs found

    Isotopic difference in the heteronuclear loss rate in a two-species surface trap

    Full text link
    We have realized a two-species mirror-magneto-optical trap containing a mixture of 87^{87}Rb (85^{85}Rb) and 133^{133}Cs atoms. Using this trap, we have measured the heteronuclear collisional loss rate βRb−Cs′\beta_{Rb-Cs}' due to intra-species cold collisions. We find a distinct difference in the magnitude and intensity dependence of βRb−Cs′\beta_{Rb-Cs}' for the two isotopes 87^{87}Rb and 85^{85}Rb which we attribute to the different ground-state hyperfine splitting energies of the two isotopes.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure

    Birth and growth of cavitation bubbles within water under tension confined in a simple synthetic tree

    Full text link
    Water under tension, as can be found in several systems including tree vessels, is metastable. Cavitation can spontaneously occur, nucleating a bubble. We investigate the dynamics of spon- taneous or triggered cavitation inside water filled microcavities of a hydrogel. Results show that a stable bubble is created in only a microsecond timescale, after transient oscillations. Then, a diffusion driven expansion leads to filling of the cavity. Analysis reveals that the nucleation of a bubble releases a tension of several tens of MPa, and a simple model captures the different time scales of the expansion process

    Single-bubble and multi-bubble cavitation in water triggered by laser-driven focusing shock waves

    Full text link
    In this study a single laser pulse spatially shaped into a ring is focused into a thin water layer, creating an annular cavitation bubble and cylindrical shock waves: an outer shock that diverges away from the excitation laser ring and an inner shock that focuses towards the center. A few nanoseconds after the converging shock reaches the focus and diverges away from the center, a single bubble nucleates at the center. The inner diverging shock then reaches the surface of the annular laser-induced bubble and reflects at the boundary, initiating nucleation of a tertiary bubble cloud. In the present experiments, we have performed time-resolved imaging of shock propagation and bubble wall motion. Our experimental observations of single-bubble cavitation and collapse and appearance of ring-shaped bubble clouds are consistent with our numerical simulations that solve a one dimensional Euler equation in cylindrical coordinates. The numerical results agree qualitatively with the experimental observations of the appearance and growth of bubble clouds at the smallest laser excitation rings. Our technique of shock-driven bubble cavitation opens novel perspectives for the investigation of shock-induced single-bubble or multi-bubble cavitation phenomena in thin liquids

    Competing mechanisms and scaling laws for carbon nanotube scission by ultrasonication

    Get PDF
    Dispersion of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) into liquids typically requires ultrasonication to exfoliate individuals CNTs from bundles. Experiments show that CNT length drops with sonication time (or energy) as a power law t?m. Yet the breakage mechanism is not well understood, and the experimentally reported power law exponent m ranges from approximately 0.2 to 0.5. Here we simulate the motion of CNTs around cavitating bubbles by coupling Brownian dynamics with the Rayleigh-Plesset equation. We observe that, during bubble growth, CNTs align tangentially to the bubble surface. Surprisingly, we find two dynamical regimes during the collapse: shorter CNTs align radially, longer ones buckle.We compute the phase diagram for CNT collapse dynamics as a function of CNT length, stiffness, and initial distance from the bubble nuclei and determine the transition from aligning to buckling. We conclude that, depending on their length, CNTs can break due to either buckling or stretching. These two mechanisms yield different power laws for the length decay (0.25 and 0.5, respectively), reconciling the apparent discrepancy in the experimental data

    Cavitation as a Microfluidic Tool

    Get PDF
    Cavitation in confined geometries in particular in narrow gaps prevalent in microfluidic geometries allows for novel applications. Here we will give an overview of successful demonstrations of cavitation as a microfluidic tool. Cavitation can pump and mix liquids very rapidly, move objects such as cells, rupture plasma membranes, probe elastic properties in micro-rheology, study coalescence, and even create arbitrary superpositions of shock waves. In all areas, bubbles are created with a focused laser which allows precise temporal and spatial control. With the usage of digital holography arbitrary configurations of bubbles can be created such as bubble clusters, squarish, toroidal, or even linear cavitation bubbles. Interestingly, even in very narrow gaps of a few tens of microns most of the bubble dynamics can be described with potential flow. This presentation will summarize published work and show current research under progress.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/84286/1/CAV2009-final103.pd

    An integrated atom-photon junction

    Full text link
    Photonic chips that integrate guides, switches, gratings and other components, process vast amounts of information rapidly on a single device. A new branch of this technology becomes possible if the light is coupled to cold atoms in a junction of small enough cross section, so that small numbers of photons interact appreciably with the atoms. Cold atoms are among the most sensitive of metrological tools and their quantum nature also provides a basis for new information processing methods. Here we demonstrate a photonic chip which provides multiple microscopic junctions between atoms and photons. We use the absorption of light at a junction to reveal the presence of one atom on average. Conversely, we use the atoms to probe the intensity and polarisation of the light. Our device paves the way for a new type of chip with interconnected circuits of atoms and photons.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure. Submitted to Nature Photonic

    Opto-mechanical measurement of micro-trap via nonlinear cavity enhanced Raman scattering spectrum

    Full text link
    High-gain resonant nonlinear Raman scattering on trapped cold atoms within a high-fineness ring optical cavity is simply explained under a nonlinear opto-mechanical mechanism, and a proposal using it to detect frequency of micro-trap on atom chip is presented. The enhancement of scattering spectrum is due to a coherent Raman conversion between two different cavity modes mediated by collective vibrations of atoms through nonlinear opto-mechanical couplings. The physical conditions of this technique are roughly estimated on Rubidium atoms, and a simple quantum analysis as well as a multi-body semiclassical simulation on this nonlinear Raman process is conducted.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure

    Generation of laser-induced cavitation bubbles with a digital hologram

    No full text
    We demonstrate a method using a spatial light modulator (SLM) to generate arbitrary 2-D spatial configurations of laser induced cavitation bubbles. The SLM acts as a phase hologram that controls the light distribution in the focal plane of a microscope objective. We generate cavitation bubbles over an area of 380x380 mu m(2) with a 20x microscope objective through absorption of the pulsed laser light in a liquid ink solution. We demonstrate the ability to accurately position up to 34 micrometer sized bubbles using laser energies of 56 mu J. (C) 2008 Optical Society of Americ
    corecore