36 research outputs found
Slow and velocity-tunable beams of metastable He by multistage Zeeman deceleration
Metastable helium molecules (He) have been generated by striking a
discharge in a supersonic expansion of helium gas from a pulsed valve. When
operating the pulsed valve at room temperature, 77K, and 10K, the mean velocity
of the supersonic beam was measured to be 1900m/s, 980m/s, and 530m/s,
respectively. A 55-stage Zeeman decelerator operated in a phase-stable manner
was then used to further reduce the beam velocity and tune it in the range
between 100 and 150m/s. The internal-state distribution of the decelerated
sample was established by photoionization spectroscopy.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
Fluorescence-lifetime-limited trapping of Rydberg helium atoms on a chip
Metastable (1s)(2s) helium atoms produced in a supersonic beam
were excited to Rydberg-Stark states (with in the range) in a
cryogenic environment and subsequently decelerated by, and trapped above, a
surface-electrode decelerator. In the trapping experiments, the Rydberg atoms
were brought to rest in 75~s and over a distance of 33~mm and kept
stationary for times in the ~s range, before
being re-accelerated for detection by pulsed field ionization. The use of a
home-built valve producing short gas pulses with a duration of about 20~s
enabled the reduction of losses arising from collisions with atoms in the
trailing part of the gas pulses. Cooling the decelerator to 4.7~K further
suppressed losses by transitions induced by blackbody radiation and by
collisions with atoms desorbing from the decelerator surface. The main
contribution (60\%) to the atom loss during deceleration is attributed to the
escape out of the decelerator moving traps of atoms having energies higher than
the trap saddle point, spontaneous emission and collisions with atoms in the
trailing part of the gas pulses causing each only about 20\% of the atom loss.
At 4.7 K, the atom losses in the trapping phase of the experiments were found
to be almost exclusively caused by spontaneous emission and the trap lifetimes
were found to correspond to the natural lifetimes of the Rydberg-Stark states.
Increasing the temperature to 100 K enhanced the trap losses by transitions
stimulated by blackbody radiation
Rydberg states of helium in electric and magnetic fields of arbitrary relative orientation
A spectroscopic study of Rydberg states of helium ( = 30 and 45) in
magnetic, electric and combined magnetic and electric fields with arbitrary
relative orientations of the field vectors is presented. The emphasis is on two
special cases where (i) the diamagnetic term is negligible and both
paramagnetic Zeeman and Stark effects are linear ( = 30, 120 mT and
= 0 - 78 V/cm ), and (ii) the diamagnetic term is dominant and the Stark
effect is linear ( = 45, = 277 mT and = 0 - 8 V/cm). Both cases
correspond to regimes where the interactions induced by the electric and
magnetic fields are much weaker than the Coulomb interaction, but much stronger
than the spin-orbit interaction. The experimental spectra are compared to
spectra calculated by determining the eigenvalues of the Hamiltonian matrix
describing helium Rydberg states in the external fields. The spectra and the
calculated energy-level diagrams in external fields reveal avoided crossings
between levels of different values and pronounced -mixing effects at
all angles between the electric and magnetic field vectors other than 0. These
observations are discussed in the context of the development of a method to
generate dense samples of cold atoms and molecules in a magnetic trap following
Rydberg-Stark deceleration.Comment: 16 pages, 18 figure
Metrology of Rydberg states of the hydrogen atom
We present a method to precisly measure the frequencies of transitions to
high- Rydberg states of the hydrogen atom which are not subject to
uncontrolled systematic shifts caused by stray electric fields. The method
consists in recording Stark spectra of the field-insensitive Stark states
and the field-sensitive Stark states, which are used to calibrate the
electric field strength. We illustrate this method with measurements of
transitions from the hyperfine levels in the
presence of intentionally applied electric fields with strengths in the range
between and Vcm. The slightly field-dependent level
energies are corrected with a precisely calculated shift to obtain the
corresponding Bohr energies . The energy
difference between and obtained with our method agrees with
Bohr's formula within the kHz experimental uncertainty. We also
determined the hyperfine splitting of the state by taking the
difference between transition frequencies from the levels to the Stark states. Our results demonstrate the
possibility of carrying out precision measurements in high- hydrogenic
quantum states
Imaging-assisted single-photon Doppler-free laser spectroscopy and the ionization energy of metastable triplet helium
Skimmed supersonic beams provide intense, cold, collision-free samples of
atoms and molecules are one of the most widely used tools in atomic and
molecular laser spectroscopy. High-resolution optical spectra are typically
recorded in a perpendicular arrangement of laser and supersonic beams to
minimize Doppler broadening. Typical Doppler widths are nevertheless limited to
tens of MHz by the residual transverse-velocity distribution in the
gas-expansion cones. We present an imaging method to overcome this limitation
which exploits the correlation between the positions of the atoms and molecules
in the supersonic expansion and their transverse velocities - and thus their
Doppler shifts. With the example of spectra of
(1\mathrm{s})(n\mathrm{p})\,^3\mathrm{P}_{0-2}\leftarrow
(1\mathrm{s})(2\mathrm{s})\,^3\mathrm{S}_1 transitions to high Rydberg states
of metastable triplet He, we demonstrate the suppression of the residual
Doppler broadening and a reduction of the full linewidths at half maximum to
only about 1 MHz in the UV. Using a retro-reflection arrangement for the laser
beam and a cross-correlation method, we determine Doppler-free spectra without
any signal loss from the selection, by imaging, of atoms within ultranarrow
transverse-velocity classes. As an illustration, we determine the ionization
energy of triplet metastable He and confirm the significant discrepancy between
recent experimental (Clausen et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 127 093001 (2021)) and
high-level theoretical (Patk\'os et al., Phys. Rev. A 103 042809 (2021)) values
of this quantity
Manipulating Rydberg atoms close to surfaces at cryogenic temperatures
Helium atoms in Rydberg states have been manipulated coherently with
microwave radiation pulses near a gold surface and near a superconducting NbTiN
surface at a temperature of . The experiments were carried out with
a skimmed supersonic beam of metastable helium atoms excited with laser radiation to
Rydberg levels with principal quantum number between and . The
separation between the cold surface and the center of the collimated beam is
adjustable down to . Short-lived Rydberg levels
were coherently transferred to the long-lived state to avoid
radiative decay of the Rydberg atoms between the photoexcitation region and the
region above the cold surfaces. Further coherent manipulation of the
Rydberg levels with pulsed microwave radiation above the surfaces
enabled measurements of stray electric fields and allowed us to study the
decoherence of the atomic ensemble. Adsorption of residual gas onto the
surfaces and the resulting slow build-up of stray fields was minimized by
controlling the temperature of the surface and monitoring the partial pressures
of HO, N, O and CO in the experimental chamber during the
cool-down. Compensation of the stray electric fields to levels below was achieved over a region of along the
beam-propagation direction which, for the beam
velocity, implies the possibility to preserve the coherence of the atomic
sample for several microseconds above the cold surfaces.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figure
Precision Measurements in Few-Electron Molecules: The Ionization Energy of Metastable He and the First Rotational Interval of He
Molecular helium represents a benchmark system for testing calculations on few-electron molecules. We report on the determination
of the adiabatic ionization energy of the a\,^3\Sigma_u^+ state of He,
corresponding to the energy interval between the a\,^3\Sigma_u^+ (,
) state of He and the X^+\,^2\Sigma_u^+ (, ) state
of He, and of the lowest rotational interval of He. These
measurements rely on the excitation of metastable He molecules to high
Rydberg states using frequency-comb-calibrated continuous-wave UV radiation in
a counter-propagating-laser-beam setup. The observed Rydberg states were
extrapolated to their series limit using multichannel quantum-defect theory.
The ionization energy of He (a\,^3\Sigma_u^+) and the lowest rotational
interval of He (X^+\,^2\Sigma_u^+) are 34301.207002(23) cm and 70.937589(23) cm, respectively
Multistage Zeeman deceleration of metastable neon
A supersonic beam of metastable neon atoms has been decelerated by exploiting
the interaction between the magnetic moment of the atoms and time-dependent
inhomogeneous magnetic fields in a multistage Zeeman decelerator. Using 91
deceleration solenoids, the atoms were decelerated from an initial velocity of
580m/s to final velocities as low as 105m/s, corresponding to a removal of more
than 95% of their initial kinetic energy. The phase-space distribution of the
cold, decelerated atoms was characterized by time-of-flight and imaging
measurements, from which a temperature of 10mK was obtained in the moving frame
of the decelerated sample. In combination with particle-trajectory simulations,
these measurements allowed the phase-space acceptance of the decelerator to be
quantified. The degree of isotope separation that can be achieved by multistage
Zeeman deceleration was also studied by performing experiments with pulse
sequences generated for Ne and Ne.Comment: 16 pages, 15 figure
New method to study ion-molecule reactions at low temperatures and application to the H + H H + H reaction
Studies of ion-molecule reactions at low temperatures are difficult because
stray electric fields in the reaction volume affect the kinetic energy of
charged reaction partners. We describe a new experimental approach to study
ion-molecule reactions at low temperatures and present, as example, a
measurement of the
reaction with the ion prepared in a single rovibrational state at
collision energies in the range -60 K. To reach such
low collision energies, we use a merged-beam approach and observe the reaction
within the orbit of a Rydberg electron, which shields the ions from stray
fields. The first beam is a supersonic beam of pure ground-state H
molecules and the second is a supersonic beam of H molecules excited to
Rydberg-Stark states of principal quantum number selected in the range
20-40. Initially, the two beams propagate along axes separated by an angle of
10. To merge the two beams, the Rydberg molecules in the latter beam
are deflected using a surface-electrode Rydberg-Stark deflector. The collision
energies of the merged beams are determined by measuring the velocity
distributions of the two beams and they are adjusted by changing the
temperature of the pulsed valve used to generate the ground-state
beam and by adapting the electric-potential functions to the electrodes of the
deflector. The collision energy is varied down to below K, i.e., below meV, with an energy resolution of 100
eV. We demonstrate that the Rydberg electron acts as a spectator and does
not affect the cross sections, which are found to closely follow a
classical-Langevin-capture model in the collision-energy range investigated.
Because all neutral atoms and molecules can be excited to Rydberg states, this
method of studyingComment: 39 pages, 10 figure
Generation of widely tunable Fourier-transform-limited terahertz pulses using narrowband near-infrared laser radiation
ISSN:0022-2852ISSN:1096-083