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Polarization-gradient cooling in a strong doughnut-mode dipole potential
Author(s) -
S. J. M. Kuppens,
M. Rauner,
M. Schiffer,
K. Sengstock,
W. Ertmer,
F. E. van Dorsselaer,
G. Nienhuis
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
physical review a
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1094-1622
pISSN - 1050-2947
DOI - 10.1103/physreva.58.3068
Subject(s) - physics , atomic physics , neon , polarization (electrochemistry) , laser cooling , recoil , metastability , transverse plane , optical lattice , dipole , optics , laser , condensed matter physics , quantum mechanics , argon , superfluidity , chemistry , structural engineering , engineering
We present experimental and theoretical studies of polarization-gradient cooling of metastable neon atoms confined to the dark center of a [Formula Presented] (doughnut) mode. A slow beam of neon atoms is guided and focused inside a blue-detuned and focused doughnut-mode laser beam to a spot size below 10 μm. The transverse motion inside this doughnut mode is cooled by means of two-dimensional optical molasses. We observed non-Gaussian two-component velocity distributions of which the cold component has a width of down to three recoil velocities. These results are found to be in qualitative agreement with a quantum Monte Carlo simulation of cooling in one dimension in the presence of an external light-shift potential. For the simulation we apply the recently developed technique of quantum-state diffusion with adaptive noise. © 1998 The American Physical Society.

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