45 research outputs found
Limitation of the modulation method to smooth wire guide roughness
It was recently demonstrated that wire guide roughness can be suppressed by
modulating the wire currents so that the atoms experience a time-averaged
potential without roughness. We theoretically study the limitations of this
technique. At low modulation frequency, we show that the longitudinal potential
modulation produces a heating of the cloud and we compute the heating rate. We
also give a quantum derivation of the rough conservative potential associated
with the micro-motion of the atoms. At large modulation frequency, we compute
the loss rate due to non adiabatic spin flip and show it presents resonnances
at multiple modulation frequencies. These studies show that the modulation
technique works for a wide range of experimental parameters. We also give
conditions to realise radio-frequency evaporative cooling in such a modulated
trap.Comment: 11 page
Experimental evidence for the breakdown of a Hartree-Fock approach in a weakly interacting Bose gas
We study the formation of a quasi-condensate in a nearly one dimensional,
weakly interacting trapped atomic Bose gas. We show that a Hartree Fock
(mean-field) approach fails to explain the presence of the quasi-condensate in
the center of the cloud: the quasi-condensate appears through an
interaction-driven cross-over and not a saturation of the excited states.
Numerical calculations based on Bogoliubov theory give an estimate of the
cross-over density in agreement with experimental results.Comment: submitted to Phys. Rev. Letter
Producing and Detecting Correlated atoms
We discuss experiments to produce and detect atom correlations in a
degenerate or nearly degenerate gas of neutral atoms. First we treat the atomic
analog of the celebrated Hanbury Brown Twiss experiment, in which atom
correlations result simply from interference effects without any atom
interactions.We have performed this experiment for both bosons and fermions.
Next we show how atom interactions produce correlated atoms using the atomic
analog of spontaneous four-wavemixing. Finally, we briefly mention experiments
on a one dimensional gas on an atom chip in which correlation effects due to
both interference and interactions have been observed.Comment: to appear in conference proceedings "Atomic Physics 20
Realizing a stable magnetic double-well potential on an atom chip
We discuss design considerations and the realization of a magnetic
double-well potential on an atom chip using current-carrying wires. Stability
requirements for the trapping potential lead to a typical size of order microns
for such a device. We also present experiments using the device to manipulate
cold, trapped atoms
Single photon emitters based on Ni/Si related defects in single crystalline diamond
We present investigations on single Ni/Si related color centers produced via
ion implantation into single crystalline type IIa CVD diamond. Testing
different ion dose combinations we show that there is an upper limit for both
the Ni and the Si dose 10^12/cm^2 and 10^10/cm^2 resp.) due to creation of
excess fluorescent background. We demonstrate creation of Ni/Si related centers
showing emission in the spectral range between 767nm and 775nm and narrow
line-widths of 2nm FWHM at room temperature. Measurements of the intensity
auto-correlation functions prove single-photon emission. The investigated color
centers can be coarsely divided into two groups: Drawing from photon statistics
and the degree of polarization in excitation and emission we find that some
color centers behave as two-level, single-dipole systems whereas other centers
exhibit three levels and contributions from two orthogonal dipoles. In
addition, some color centers feature stable and bright emission with saturation
count rates up to 78kcounts/s whereas others show fluctuating count rates and
three-level blinking.Comment: 7 pages, submitted to Applied Physics B, revised versio
Thermal properties of AlN-based atom chips
We have studied the thermal properties of atom chips consisting o high
thermal conductivity Aluminum Nitride (AlN) substrates on which gold microwires
are directly deposited. We have measured the heating of wires of several widths
and with different thermal couplings to the copper mount holding the chip. The
results are in good agreement with a theoretical model where the copper mount
is treated as a heat sink and the thermal interface resistance between the wire
and the substrate is vanishing. We give analytical formulas describing the
different transient heating regimes and the steady state. We identify criteria
to optimize the design of a chip as well as the maximal currents that can
be fed in the wires. For a 600 m thick-chip glued on a copper block with
Epotek H77, we find A for a 3 m high, 200 m wide-wire