29 research outputs found

    Three-body decay of a rubidium Bose-Einstein condensate

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    We have measured the three-body decay of a Bose-Einstein condensate of rubidium (87^{87}Rb) atoms prepared in the doubly polarized ground state F=mF=2F=m_F=2. Our data are taken for a peak atomic density in the condensate varying between 2×10142\times 10^{14} cm−3^{-3} at initial time and 7×10137\times 10^{13} cm−3^{-3}, 16 seconds later. Taking into account the influence of the uncondensed atoms onto the decay of the condensate, we deduce a rate constant for condensed atoms L=1.8(±0.5)×10−29L=1.8 (\pm 0.5) \times 10^{-29} cm6^{6} s−1^{-1}. For these densities we did not find a significant contribution of two-body processes such as spin dipole relaxation.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure

    Precision Feshbach spectroscopy of ultracold Cs-2

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    We have observed and located more than 60 magnetic field-induced Feshbach resonances in ultracold collisions of ground-state Cs-133 atoms. Multiple extremely weak Feshbach resonances associated with g-wave molecular states are detected through variations in the radiative collision cross sections. The Feshbach spectroscopy allows us to determine the interactions between ultracold cesium atoms and the molecular energy structure near the dissociation continuum with unprecedented precision. Our work not only represents a very successful collaboration of experimental and theoretical efforts, but also provides essential information for cesium Bose-Einstein condensation, Cs-2 molecules, and atomic clock experiments

    Frequencies and Damping rates of a 2D Deformed Trapped Bose gas above the Critical Temperature

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    We derive the equation of motion for the velocity fluctuations of a 2D deformed trapped Bose gas above the critical temperature in the hydrodynamical regime. From this equation, we calculate the eigenfrequencies for a few low-lying excitation modes. Using the method of averages, we derive a dispersion relation in a deformed trap that interpolates between the collisionless and hydrodynamic regimes. We make use of this dispersion relation to calculate the frequencies and the damping rates for monopole and quadrupole mode in both the regimes. We also discuss the time evolution of the wave packet width of a Bose gas in a time dependent as well as time independent trap.Comment: 13 pages, latex fil

    Finite-temperature simulations of the scissors mode in Bose-Einstein condensed gases

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    The dynamics of a trapped Bose-condensed gas at finite temperatures is described by a generalized Gross-Pitaevskii equation for the condensate order parameter and a semi-classical kinetic equation for the thermal cloud, solved using NN-body simulations. The two components are coupled by mean fields as well as collisional processes that transfer atoms between the two. We use this scheme to investigate scissors modes in anisotropic traps as a function of temperature. Frequency shifts and damping rates of the condensate mode are extracted, and are found to be in good agreement with recent experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Dissipative dynamics of vortex arrays in trapped Bose-condensed gases: neutron stars physics on μ\muK scale

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    We develop a theory of dissipative dynamics of large vortex arrays in trapped Bose-condensed gases. We show that in a static trap the interaction of the vortex array with thermal excitations leads to a non-exponential decay of the vortex structure, and the characteristic lifetime depends on the initial density of vortices. Drawing an analogy with physics of pulsar glitches, we propose an experiment which employs the heating of the thermal cloud in the course of the decay of the vortex array as a tool for a non-destructive study of the vortex dynamics.Comment: 4 pages, revtex; revised versio

    Oscillations of rotating trapped Bose-Einstein condensates

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    The tensor-virial method is applied for a study of oscillation modes of uniformly rotating Bose-Einstein condensed gases, whose rigid body rotation is supported by an vortex array. The second order virial equations are derived in the hydrodynamic regime for an arbitrary external harmonic trapping potential assuming that the condensate is a superfluid at zero temperature. The axisymmetric equilibrium shape of the condensate is determined as a function of the deformation of the trap; its domain of stability is bounded by the constraint Ω<1\Omega<1 on the rotation rate (measured in units of the trap frequency ω0\omega_0.) The oscillations of the axisymmetric condensate are stable with respect to the transverse-shear, toroidal and quasi-radial modes of oscillations, corresponding to the l=2l= 2, ∣m∣=0,1,2| m| = 0,1,2 surface deformations. In non-axisymmetric traps, the equilibrium constrains the (dimensionless) deformation in the plane orthogonal to the rotation to the domain A2>Ω2A_2 > \Omega^2 with Ω<1\Omega< 1. The second harmonic oscillation modes in non-axisymmetric traps separate into two classes which have even or odd parity with respect to the direction of the rotation axis. Numerical solutions show that these modes are stable in the parameter domain where equilibrium figures exist.Comment: 16 pages, including 4 figures, uses Revtex; v2 includes a treatment of modes in unisotropic traps; PRA in pres
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