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Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

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Page 1: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms

Robert Brecha

University of Dayton

Page 2: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Outline

Basics of cooling and trapping atoms

Fermionic and bosonic atoms - why do we use potassium?

Parametric excitation and cooling

Sympathetic cooling and BEC

Page 3: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Co-workers and Affiliations

Giovanni Modugno – LENSGabriele Ferrari – LENSGiacomo Roati – Università di TrentoNicola Poli – Università di FirenzeMassimo Inguscio – LENS and Università

di Firenze

Page 4: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

In the Lab at LENS

Page 5: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Motivations for Trapping Atoms

Fundamental atomic physics measurements

Condensed matter physics with controllable interactions (“soft” condensed matter)

Tabletop astrophysics – collapsing stars,black holes, white dwarfs

Quantum computing

Page 6: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Atomic Cooling

Laser photons

Physics2000 Demo

Page 7: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Cooling Force

Random emission directions momentum kicks retarding force

Force = (momentum change per absorbed photon) (scattering rate of photons) (Depends on intensity, detuning, relative speed)

Force is not position-dependent no permanent trapping

Page 8: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Laser Cooling and TrappingMagnetic FieldCoils(anti-Helmholtz)

Circularlypolarizedlaser beams

Page 9: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Far Off-Resonance Trap (FORT)

One disadvantage of MOT – presence of magneticfields; only certain internal states trappable

Solution – Use all-optical methodLaser electric field induces an atomic dipole

E

Interaction potential of dipole and field:

0

1 1Re

2 2dipoleU E Ic

Page 10: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

FORT Trapping Potential

20

20 0

2 2 /

4 /

tA

R

U M

U Mw

2 2 20, cos exp 2 /U r z U kz r w

Standing-wave in z-direction, Gaussian radially

Oscillation frequencies:

2 21

2U m x

450 K

Page 11: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Fermions vs. Bosons

Spin-1/2 Integer spin

State-occupation limited Gregarious

1

1f

e

1

1f

e

Do not collide* Collide

Page 12: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Fermions vs. Bosons

Bosonic ground-stateoccupation fraction

Fermionic occupationprobabilities

Ensher, et al., PRL 77, 4984 (1996)

Page 13: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Potassium

Three isotopes:39K (93.26%) boson40K (0.01%) fermion41K (6.73%) boson

Page 14: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Potassium Energy Levels

Page 15: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

FORT Experimental Schematic

MOT: 5 × 107 atomsT ~ 60K

FORT: 5 × 105 atomsT = 80 K

Absorption beam

Page 16: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Absorption Image from FORT

N =×atoms n = 5 ×cm-3T = 50 – 80 K dT/dt = 40 K/sr = 2× 1 kHz a = 2× 600 kHzU0 = 300 - 600 K

450 K

Page 17: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Elastic Collisions

= p/2ncm

at = 169(9)a0

= 10(3) ms

Page 18: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Inelastic Collisions

Page 19: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Frequency Measurements“Parametric Excitation”

Driving an oscillator by modulating the spring constant leads to resonances for frequencies 20/n.

0

Here we modulatethe dipole-traplaser by a few percent

Page 20: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Parametric Resonances

2a1.8a

Page 21: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Parametric Heating ...and Cooling

2a

1.8a

Tex = 10 ms = 12 %

Tex = 2 ms = 12 %

Page 22: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Trap Anharmonicity

Page 23: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Cooling by Parametric Excitation

Selective excitation of high-lying levels forced evaporation

Occurs on a fast time-scale

Independent of internal atomic structure works on external degrees of freedom

Somewhat limited in effectiveness

Page 24: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

The New Experiment

Page 25: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Transfer Tube - MOT1 to MOT2

Page 26: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Sympathetic Cooling

Use “bath” of Rb to cool a sample of K atoms

Goal 1 – Achieve Fermi degeneracy for 40K atoms

Goal 2 – (After #1 did not seem to work)Achieve Bose-Einstein condensationfor 41K

Page 27: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Some Open Questions

Do K and Rb atoms collide? (What is theelastic collisional cross-section?)

Do K and K atoms collide? Is the scattering length positive (stable BEC) or negative (unstable BEC at best)

Page 28: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Some Cold-Collision Physics

Scattered particle wavefunction is written as a sumof “partial waves” with l quantum numbers.

For l > 0, there is repulsive barrier in the correspondingpotential that inhibits collisions at low temperatures.

For identical particles, fermions have only l-odd partial waves, bosons have only l-even waves.

Identical fermions do not collide at low temperatures.

Page 29: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Rubidium Energy Levels87Rb

F´= 3

F´= 2

F´= 1F´= 0

F = 1

F = 26835 MHz

267 MHz

157 MHz

72 MHz

780 nm(4×108 MHz)

Page 30: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Rubidium Ground-State

Apply a B-field:mF = 2

F = 1

F = 2

6835 MHz

mF = -1

“Low-field-seeking states”

Page 31: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

BEC ProcedureTrap 87Rb, then 41K in MOT1Transfer first Rb, then K into MOT2Now have 107 K atoms at 300K and

5×108 Rb atoms at 100KLoad these into the magnetic trap after preparing in

doubly-polarized spin state |F=2,mF=2>Selective evaporative cooling with microwave knifeCheck temperature (density) at various stages (a

destructive process)

Page 32: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

QUIC Trap

Figure by Tilman Esslinger, ETH Zurich

Page 33: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

QUIC Trap Transfer

Figure by Tilman Esslinger, ETH Zurich

Quadrupole field

Magnetic trap field

Page 35: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

0.1 1 10

1

10

100

1000

10000

Microwave Treshold (MHz)

Ato

m N

um

ber

(10

4 )

1

10

100

Tem

per

atu

re (K

)

Rb

K

Temperature and Number of Atoms

Page 37: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Optical Density Cross-section

Thermal

Mixed

Condensate

Page 38: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

R b K

K

K

K

K

8 7 4 1

Absorption Images

Rb density remainsconstant

K density increases100x

Page 39: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Elastic Collisional Measurements

Return to parametric heating (of Rb) and watch the subsequent temperature increase of K.

13equilt n v

Determined from absorption images

Page 40: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Elastic Collisional Measurements

Ferrari, et al., submitted to PRL

Temperature dependence ofelastic collision rate (Is a >0 or is a < 0?)

Potassium temperatureafter parametricallyheating rubidium

Page 41: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Double Bose Condensate

Page 42: Experiments with Trapped Potassium Atoms Robert Brecha University of Dayton

Future Directions