559 research outputs found

    μ3-Carbonato-κ3 O:O′:O′′-tris­{(η6-ben­zene)[(R)-1-(1-amino­ethyl)naphthyl-κ2 C 2,N]ruthenium(II)} hexa­fluorido­phosphate dichloro­methane solvate

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    The title compound, [Ru3(C12H12N)3(CO3)(C6H6)3]PF6·CH2Cl2, was obtained unintentionally as the product of an attempted deprotonation of the monomeric parent ruthenium complex [Ru(C12H12N)(C6H6)(C2H3N)]PF6. The carbonate ligand bridges three half-sandwich cyclo­ruthenated fragments, each of them exhibiting a pseudo-tetra­hedral geometry. The configuration of the Ru atoms is S. The naphthyl groups of the enanti­opure cyclo­ruthenated benzylic amine ligands point in the same direction, adopting a propeller shape

    Study of light-assisted collisions between a few cold atoms in a microscopic dipole trap

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    We study light-assisted collisions in an ensemble containing a small number (~3) of cold Rb87 atoms trapped in a microscopic dipole trap. Using our ability to operate with one atom exactly in the trap, we measure the one-body heating rate associated to a near-resonant laser excitation, and we use this measurement to extract the two-body loss rate associated to light-assisted collisions when a few atoms are present in the trap. Our measurements indicate that the two-body loss rate can reach surprisingly large values beta>10^{-8} cm^{3}.s^{-1} and varies rapidly with the trap depth and the parameters of the excitation light.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure

    Measurement of the atom number distribution in an optical tweezer using single photon counting

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    We demonstrate in this paper a method to reconstruct the atom number distribution of a cloud containing a few tens of cold atoms. The atoms are first loaded from a magneto-optical trap into a microscopic optical dipole trap and then released in a resonant light probe where they undergo a Brownian motion and scatter photons. We count the number of photon events detected on an image intensifier. Using the response of our detection system to a single atom as a calibration, we extract the atom number distribution when the trap is loaded with more than one atom. The atom number distribution is found to be compatible with a Poisson distribution.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure

    Propagation of light through small clouds of cold interacting atoms

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    We demonstrate experimentally that a cloud of cold atoms with a size comparable to the wavelength of light can induce large group delays on a laser pulse when the laser is tightly focused on it and is close to an atomic resonance. Delays as large as -10 ns are observed, corresponding to "superluminal" propagation with negative group velocities as low as -300 m/s. Strikingly, this large delay is associated with a moderate extinction owing to the very small size of the cloud and to the light-induced interactions between atoms. It implies that a large phase shift is imprinted on the continuous laser beam, and opens interesting perspectives for applications to quantum technologies.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures Supplemental Material : 2 pages, 2 Figure

    Evaporative cooling of a small number of atoms in a single-beam microscopic dipole trap

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    We demonstrate experimentally the evaporative cooling of a few hundred rubidium 87 atoms in a single-beam microscopic dipole trap. Starting from 800 atoms at a temperature of 125microKelvins, we produce an unpolarized sample of 40 atoms at 110nK, within 3s. The phase-space density at the end of the evaporation reaches unity, close to quantum degeneracy. The gain in phase-space density after evaporation is 10^3. We find that the scaling laws used for much larger numbers of atoms are still valid despite the small number of atoms involved in the evaporative cooling process. We also compare our results to a simple kinetic model describing the evaporation process and find good agreement with the data.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure

    Controlling the cold collision shift in high precision atomic interferometry

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    We present here a new method based on a transfer of population by adiabatic passage that allows to prepare cold atomic samples with a well defined ratio of atomic density and atom number. This method is used to perform a measurement of the cold collision frequency shift in a laser cooled cesium clock at the percent level, which makes the evaluation of the cesium fountains accuracy at the 101610^{-16} level realistic. With an improved set-up, the adiabatic passage would allow measurements of atom number-dependent phase shifts at the 10310^{-3} level in high precision experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, 2 table

    Space-time asymptotics of an infinite-dimensional diffusion having a long-range memory

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    We develop a cluster expansion in space-time for an infinite-dimensional system of interacting diffusions where the drift term of each diffusion depends on the whole past of the trajectory, these interacting diffusions arise when considering the Langevin dynamics of a ferromagnetic system submitted to a disordered external magnetic field

    Homogenization of an ensemble of interacting resonant scatterers

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    We study theoretically the concept of homogenization in optics using an ensemble of randomly distributed resonant stationary atoms with density ρ\rho. The ensemble is dense enough for the usual condition for homogenization, viz. ρλ31\rho\lambda^3 \gg 1, to be reached. Introducing the coherent and incoherent scattered powers, we define two criteria to define the homogenization regime. We find that when the excitation field is tuned in a broad frequency range around the resonance, none of the criteria for homogenization is fulfilled, meaning that the condition ρλ31\rho\lambda^3\gg 1 is not sufficient to characterize the homogenized regime around the atomic resonance. We interpret these results as a consequence of the light-induced dipole-dipole interactions between the atoms, which implies a description of scattering in terms of collective modes rather than as a sequence of individual scattering events. Finally, we show that, although homogenization can never be reached for a dense ensemble of randomly positioned laser-cooled atoms around resonance, it becomes possible if one introduces spatial correlations in the positions of the atoms or non-radiative losses, such as would be the case for organic molecules or quantum dots coupled to a phonon bath.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures. Corrected mistakes in reference

    Sub-Poissonian atom number fluctuations using light-assisted collisions

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    We investigate experimentally the number statistics of a mesoscopic ensemble of cold atoms in a microscopic dipole trap loaded from a magneto-optical trap, and find that the atom number fluctuations are reduced with respect to a Poisson distribution due to light-assisted two-body collisions. For numbers of atoms N>2, we measure a reduction factor (Fano factor) of 0.72+/-0.07, which differs from 1 by more than 4 standard deviations. We analyze this fact by a general stochastic model describing the competition between the loading of the trap from a reservoir of cold atoms and multi-atom losses, which leads to a master equation. Applied to our experimental regime, this model indicates an asymptotic value of 3/4 for the Fano factor at large N and in steady state. We thus show that we have reached the ultimate level of reduction in number fluctuations in our system.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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