2,009,424 research outputs found
Deterministic delivery of externally cold and precisely positioned single molecular ions
We present the preparation and deterministic delivery of a selectable number
of externally cold molecular ions. A laser cooled ensemble of Mg^+ ions
subsequently confined in several linear Paul traps inter-connected via a
quadrupole guide serves as a cold bath for a single or up to a few hundred
molecular ions. Sympathetic cooling embeds the molecular ions in the
crystalline structure. MgH^+ ions, that serve as a model system for a large
variety of other possible molecular ions, are cooled down close to the Doppler
limit and are positioned with an accuracy of one micrometer. After the
production process, severely compromising the vacuum conditions, the molecular
ion is efficiently transfered into nearly background-free environment. The
transfer of a molecular ion between different traps as well as the control of
the molecular ions in the traps is demonstrated. Schemes, optimized for the
transfer of a specific number of ions, are realized and their efficiencies are
evaluated. This versatile source applicable for broad charge-to-mass ratios of
externally cold and precisely positioned molecular ions can serve as a
container-free target preparation device well suited for diffraction or
spectroscopic measurements on individual molecular ions at high repetition
rates (kHz).Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure
Sympathetic cooling of He ions in a radiofrequency trap
We have generated Coulomb crystals of ultracold He ions in a linear
radiofrequency trap, by sympathetic cooling via laser--cooled Be.
Stable crystals containing up to 150 localized He ions at 20 mK were
obtained. Ensembles or single ultracold He ions open up interesting
perspectives for performing precision tests of QED and measurements of nuclear
radii. The present work also indicates the feasibility of cooling and
crystallizing highly charged atomic ions using Be as coolant.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Helium-3 and Helium-4 acceleration by high power laser pulses for hadron therapy
The laser driven acceleration of ions is considered a promising candidate for
an ion source for hadron therapy of oncological diseases. Though proton and
carbon ion sources are conventionally used for therapy, other light ions can
also be utilized. Whereas carbon ions require 400 MeV per nucleon to reach the
same penetration depth as 250 MeV protons, helium ions require only 250 MeV per
nucleon, which is the lowest energy per nucleon among the light ions. This fact
along with the larger biological damage to cancer cells achieved by helium
ions, than that by protons, makes this species an interesting candidate for the
laser driven ion source. Two mechanisms (Magnetic Vortex Acceleration and
hole-boring Radiation Pressure Acceleration) of PW-class laser driven ion
acceleration from liquid and gaseous helium targets are studied with the goal
of producing 250 MeV per nucleon helium ion beams that meet the hadron therapy
requirements. We show that He3 ions, having almost the same penetration depth
as He4 with the same energy per nucleon, require less laser power to be
accelerated to the required energy for the hadron therapy.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
Diffusion and Coulomb separation of ions in dense matter
We analyze diffusion equations in strongly coupled Coulomb mixtures of ions
in dense stellar matter. Strong coupling of ions in the presence of
gravitational forces and electric fields (induced by plasma polarization in the
presence of gravity) produces a specific diffusion current which can separate
ions with the same A/Z (mass to charge number) ratios but different Z. This
Coulomb separation of ions can be important for the evolution of white dwarfs
and neutron stars.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures; slightly updated with respect to version
Trapped ion scaling with pulsed fast gates
Fast entangling gates for trapped ions offer vastly improved gate operation
times relative to implemented gates, as well as approaches to trap scaling.
Gates on neighbouring ions only involve local ions when performed sufficiently
fast, and we find that even a fast gate between distant ions with few degrees
of freedom restores all the motional modes given more stringent gate speed
conditions. We compare pulsed fast gate schemes, defined by a timescale faster
than the trap period, and find that our proposed scheme has less stringent
requirements on laser repetition rate for achieving arbitrary gate time targets
and infidelities well below . By extending gate schemes to ion
crystals, we explore the effect of ion number on gate fidelity for coupling
neighbouring pairs of ions in large crystals. Inter-ion distance determines the
gate time, and a factor of five increase in repetition rate, or correspondingly
the laser power, reduces the infidelity by almost two orders of magnitude. We
also apply our fast gate scheme to entangle the first and last ions in a
crystal. As the number of ions in the crystal increases, significant increases
in the laser power are required to provide the short gate times corresponding
to fidelity above 0.99.Comment: 29 pages, 10 figure
Sympathetic and swap cooling of trapped ions by cold atoms in a MOT
A mixed system of cooled and trapped, ions and atoms, paves the way for ion
assisted cold chemistry and novel many body studies. Due to the different
individual trapping mechanisms, trapped atoms are significantly colder than
trapped ions, therefore in the combined system, the strong binary ionatom
interaction results in heat flow from ions to atoms. Conversely, trapped ions
can also get collisionally heated by the cold atoms, making the resulting
equilibrium between ions and atoms intriguing. Here we experimentally
demonstrate, Rubidium ions (Rb) cool in contact with magneto-optically
trapped (MOT) Rb atoms, contrary to the general expectation of ion heating for
equal ion and atom masses. The cooling mechanism is explained theoretically and
substantiated with numerical simulations. The importance of resonant charge
exchange (RCx) collisions, which allows swap cooling of ions with atoms,
wherein a single glancing collision event brings a fast ion to rest, is
discussed.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
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