Title: Ultra-Cold Matter Technology
1Ultra-Cold Matter Technology for Many-Body
Physics and Interferometry
Seth A. M. Aubin Dept. of Physics, College of
William and Mary
April 19, 2007 AMO Seminar Old Dominion University
2Outline
- Ultra-cold Matter Apparatus
- ? Apparatus review
- ? High efficiency evaporation
- ? Bose-Fermi Degeneracy
- Physics
- ? Past 40K-87Rb cross-section.
- ? Present BEC interferometry.
- ? Future Fermion interferometry.
- Polar molecules for many-body physics.
3Whats Ultra-Cold Matter ?
? Typically nanoKelvin microKelvin ?
Atoms/particles have velocity mm/s cm/s
- Very Dense in Phase Space
Different temperatures Same phase space density
Higher phase space density
4Ultra-cold Quantum Mechanics
? Quantum physics is important when
Equivalent deBroglie wavelength inter-particle
separation
5Quantum Statistics
Bosons
Fermions
- anti-symmetric multi-particle wavefunction.
- ½-integer spin electrons, protons, neutrons,
40K. - probability of occupying a state igt with
energy Ei.
- symmetric multi-particle wavefunction.
- Integer spin photons, 87Rb.
- probability of occupying a state igt with
energy Ei.
6How do you make ULTRA-COLD matter?
Two step process
1. Laser cooling ? Magneto-Optical Trap
(MOT) ? Optical Molasses
2. Evaporative cooling ? Magnetic traps ?
Evaporation
7Magneto-Optical Trap (MOT)
8Magneto-Optical Trap (MOT)
100 ?K
9Magnetic Traps
Interaction between external magnetic field and
atomic magnetic moment
For an atom in the hyperfine state
Energy minimum
B minimum
10Micro-magnetic Traps
- Advantages of atom chips
- Very tight confinement.
- Fast evaporation time.
- photo-lithographic production.
- Integration of complex trapping potentials.
- Integration of RF, microwave and optical
elements. - Single vacuum chamber apparatus.
11Evaporative Cooling
Wait time is given by the elastic collision rate
kelastic n ? v Macro-trap low initial
density, evaporation time 10-30 s. Micro-trap
high initial density, evaporation time 1-2 s.
12Evaporative Cooling
Wait time is given by the elastic collision rate
kelastic n ? v Macro-trap low initial
density, evaporation time 10-30 s. Micro-trap
high initial density, evaporation time 1-2 s.
13RF Evaporation
In a harmonic trap
- RF frequency determines energy at which spin
flip occurs. - Sweep RF between 1 MHz and 30 MHz.
- Chip wire serves as RF B-field source.
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18Light-Induced Atom Desorption (LIAD)
- Conflicting pressure requirements
- Large Alkali partial pressure ? large MOT.
- UHV vacuum ? long magnetic trap lifetime.
19Micro-Magnetic Trap Difficulties
- Technology
- Electroplated gold wires on a silicon
substrate. - Manufactured by J. Estève (Aspect/Orsay).
20Magnetic Dimple Trap Extra Compression
T19 ?K
T7 ?K
faxial boosted by two (to 26 Hz)
21Outline
- Intro to Ultra-cold Matter
- ? What is it ?
- ? How do you make it ?
- ? Bose-Einstein Condensates
- ? Degenerate Fermi Gases
- Physics
- ? Past 40K-87Rb cross-section.
- ? Present BEC interferometry
- ? Future Fermion interferometry.
- Polar molecules for many-body physics.
22Bose-Einstein Condensation of 87Rb
2387Rb BEC
2487Rb BEC
25Fermions Sympathetic Cooling
Problem Cold identical fermions do not interact
due to Pauli Exclusion Principle. ? No
rethermalization. ? No evaporative cooling.
Solution add non-identical particles ? Pauli
exclusion principle does not apply.
We cool our fermionic 40K atoms sympathetically
with an 87Rb BEC.
26Sympathetic Cooling
27Below TF
0.9 TF
0.35 TF
- For Boltzmann statistics and a harmonic trap,
- For ultra-cold fermions, even at T0,
28Pauli Pressure
29Outline
- Intro to Ultra-cold Matter
- ? What is it ?
- ? How do you make it ?
- ? Bose-Einstein Condensates
- ? Degenerate Fermi Gases
- Physics
- ? Past 40K-87Rb cross-section.
- ? Present BEC interferometry
- ? Future Fermion interferometry.
- Polar molecules for many-body physics.
30Past Surprises with Rb-K cold collisions
31Naïve Scattering Theory
- Sympathetic cooling 1st try
- Should just work ! -- Anonymous
- Add 40K to 87Rb BEC ? No sympathetic cooling
observed !
32Solution Work Harder !!!
- Slow down evaporative ramp 2s ? 6s !!!
- Decrease amount of 87Rb loaded !
- Added Tapered Amplifier to boost 767 nm 40K MOT
power. - Direct absorption imaging of 40K.
- Optical pumping of 40K.
- More LIAD lights.
- Alternate MOTs 25s 40K 3s 87Rb.
- Dichroic waveplates for MOT power balance.
- Decompress micro B-Trap.
- Increase B-Trap Ioffe B-field.
- Clean up micro B-trap turn-off.
33Experiment Sympathetic cooling only works for
slow evaporation
34Cross-Section Measurement
Thermalization of 40K with 87Rb
35Whats happening?
36Present BEC Interferometry
37Atom Interferometry
IDEA replace photon waves with atom waves. ?
?atom ?? ?photon
Example 87Rb atom _at_ v1 m/s ? ?atom ? 5 nm.
green photon ? ?photon ? 500 nm.
2 orders of magnitude increase in resolution at
v1 m/s !!!
38RF beamsplitter
How do you beamsplit ultra-cold atoms ?
39RF beamsplitter
How do you beamsplit ultra-cold atoms ?
40RF beamsplitter
How do you beamsplit ultra-cold atoms ?
41RF beamsplitter
How do you beamsplit ultra-cold atoms ?
42Implementation
figure from Schumm et al., Nature Physics 1, 57
(2005).
43RF splitting of ultra-cold 87Rb
Scan the RF magnetic field from 1.6 MHz to a
final value BRF 1 Gauss
44RF splitting of ultra-cold 87Rb
Scan the RF magnetic field from 1.6 MHz to a
final value BRF 1 Gauss
45RF splitting of ultra-cold 87Rb
Scan the RF magnetic field from 1.6 MHz to a
final value BRF 1 Gauss
46RF splitting of ultra-cold 87Rb
Scan the RF magnetic field from 1.6 MHz to a
final value BRF 1 Gauss
47RF splitting of ultra-cold 87Rb
Scan the RF magnetic field from 1.6 MHz to a
final value BRF 1 Gauss
48RF splitting of ultra-cold 87Rb
Scan the RF magnetic field from 1.6 MHz to a
final value BRF 1 Gauss
49RF splitting of ultra-cold 87Rb
Scan the RF magnetic field from 1.6 MHz to a
final value BRF 1 Gauss
50RF splitting of ultra-cold 87Rb
Scan the RF magnetic field from 1.6 MHz to a
final value BRF 1 Gauss
51Interferometry Experiment
Fringe spacing (h ? TOF)/(mass ? splitting)
52Species-dependent Potentials
Atomic Physics 20, 241-249 (2006).
53Future Fermion Interferometry
54Atom Interferometry
IDEA replace photon waves with atom waves. ?
?atom ?? ?photon
Example 87Rb atom _at_ v1 m/s ? ?atom ? 5 nm.
green photon ? ?photon ? 500 nm.
2 orders of magnitude increase in resolution at
v1 m/s !!!
55Bosons and Fermions again
1st Idea use a Bose-Einstein condensate
- Photons (bosons) ? 87Rb (bosons)
- Laser has all photons in same spatial
mode/state. - BEC has all atoms in the same trap ground state.
56Spatial Atom Interferometry
- External force sensing
- Gravitational fields, via their mass.
- Magnetic fields, via the Zeeman effect.
- Electric fields, via the Stark effect.
57Measuring Sub-mm Gravity
- Interferometers
- Mach-Zender
- Bloch oscillations
- ? optical lattice.
- ? double well potential.
BEC proposal S. Dimopoulos et al., Phys. Rev. D
68, 124021 (2003).
- Systematic errors -- i.e. whats the membrane
for? - Look for gravity effect by varying atom-test
mass distance. - Surface forces (Casimir-Polder/Van der Wall)
are much larger than gravity. ? use a stationary
membrane to pin and minimize the surface force. - (see for example, J. E. Sipe, JOSA B 4,
481 (1987) )
58Future Novel Many-Body Physics with Polar
Molecules
59Odd-wave Cooper Pairing
BCS superconductors/superfluids The Cooper pair
consists of S-wave pairing of spin ? and spin ?
particles (S0, L0). High-Tc superconductors The
pairing mechanism is D-wave in
nature. Superfluid 3He Cooper pair has P-wave
orbital angular momentum. Superfluid ultra-cold
degenerate Fermi Gas The pairing mechanism is
S-wave in nature.
60Fermionic Superfluid KRb
Tc critical temperature for superfluidity
61How do you get Ultra-Cold KRb?
- Feshbach Resonance
- ? weakly bound KRb
-
- Photo-association
- stimulated transition
- to the ground state
Recent news !!! Weakly bound KRb produced in a 3D
optical lattice.. C. Ospelkaus et al., Phys. Rev.
Lett. 97, 120402 (2006).
S. Kotochigova et al., Eur. Phys. J. D 31,
189194 (2004).
62Summary
- Degenerate Bose-Fermi mixture on a chip.
- 40K-87Rb cross-section measurement.
- BEC Interferometry.
- Future Fermion Interferometry
- Future Ultra-cold polar molecules.
63Thywissen Group
T. Schumm
64Ultra-cold atoms group
65Apparatus Design
66Apparatus
67Apparatus continued
photo from Thywissen group
figure from M. Greiner et al., Phys. Rev. A 63,
031401(2001)
68The Problem with Fermions
Identical ultra-cold fermions do not interact