| Literature DB >> 35042899 |
Chung Chuan Hsu1, Rémy Larue2,3, Chang Chi Kwong4,5, David Wilkowski1,3,6.
Abstract
We demonstrate a simple and compact approach to laser cool and trap atoms based on laser-induced thermal ablation (LITA) of a pure solid granule. A rapid thermalisation of the granule leads to a fast recovery of the ultra-high vacuum condition required for a long trapping lifetime of the cold gas. We give a proof-of-concept of the technique, performing a magneto-optical trap on the 461 nm [Formula: see text] transition of strontium. We get up to 3.5 million of cold strontium-88 atoms with a trapping lifetime of more than 4 s. The lifetime is limited by the pressure of the strontium-free residual background vapour. We also implement an original configuration of permanent magnets to create the quadruple magnetic field of the magneto-optical trap. The LITA technique can be generalized to other atomic elements such as transition metals and lanthanide atoms, and shows a strong potential for applications in quantum technologies ranging from quantum computing to precision measurements such as outdoor inertial sensing.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35042899 PMCID: PMC8766515 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-04697-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1A strontium MOT in a vacuum chamber (rectangular cuboid). The blue arrows represent the 461 nm MOT beams. The magnetic fields and repumper lasers are not shown here. Inset: sample image of the cold atoms cloud rendered in false colour (size 1.5 mm).
Figure 2Configuration of magnets arranged on eight vertices of a cuboid (four magnets at each vertex). The red and blue colours represent the two poles of the magnets. The magnetic field direction points from blue to red.
Figure 3Experimental results of the short pulse sequence. Top panel: Temporal evolution of the cold atoms number (light blue triangles) and the strontium vapour (red circle), averaged over 78 runs of the experiment. The time origin corresponds to the ignition of the ablation laser. The decaying part of the MOT signal is fitted to an exponential function (black dashed line) to give a MOT lifetime of s. The uncertainty reflects one standard deviation of the lifetime measured over 1.5 h for the 78 runs of experiments. Inset: A zoom of the first 200 ms. The horizontal error bars reflect the temporal resolution of our measurement methods. Bottom panel: Normalized temporal evolution of atomic fluorescence signal in semi-log scale.
Figure 4Experimental results of the long pulse sequence. (a) Temporal evolution of the fluorescence signal of the cold atoms cloud (light blue triangles) and the strontium vapour (red circles) for an ablation duration of s, and a laser power of 20 W. The vertical dashed line shows the time at which the ablation laser turns off. (b) The peak cold atoms number as a function of ablation duration T. Fluorescence signals are observed when s. (c) Loading times (time taken to reach the peak atoms number value after the ablation laser ignition) as a function of the ablation duration T. (d) Temporal evolution of the fluorescence signal of the cold atoms cloud (light blue triangles) and the strontium vapour (red circles) for an ablation duration of s, and a laser power of 20 W. The vertical dashed line indicates the time at which the ablation laser turns off. In (a) and (d), the time origin corresponds to the laser ablation ignition.