36 research outputs found
Coherent Control of Ultracold Collisions with Chirped Light: Direction Matters
We demonstrate the ability to coherently control ultracold atomic Rb
collisions using frequency-chirped light on the nanosecond time scale. For
certain center frequencies of the chirp, the rate of inelastic trap-loss
collisions induced by negatively chirped light is dramatically suppressed
compared to the case of a positive chirp. We attribute this to a fundamental
asymmetry in the system: an excited wavepacket always moves inward on the
attractive molecular potential. For a positive chirp, the resonance condition
moves outward in time, while for a negative chirp, it moves inward, in the same
direction as the excited wavepacket; this allows multiple interactions between
the wavepacket and the light, enabling the wavepacket to be returned coherently
to the ground state. Classical and quantum calculations support this
interpretation
Towards surface quantum optics with Bose-Einstein condensates in evanescent waves
We present a surface trap which allows for studying the coherent interaction
of ultracold atoms with evanescent waves. The trap combines a magnetic Joffe
trap with a repulsive evanescent dipole potential. The position of the magnetic
trap can be controlled with high precision which makes it possible to move
ultracold atoms to the surface of a glass prism in a controlled way. The
optical potential of the evanescent wave compensates for the strong attractive
van der Waals forces and generates a potential barrier at only a few hundred
nanometers from the surface. The trap is tested with Rb Bose-Einstein
condensates (BEC), which are stably positioned at distances from the surfaces
below one micrometer