Multipartite model of evaporative cooling in optical dipole traps

被引:2
作者
Williams, Matthew J. [1 ]
Fertig, Chad [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Georgia, Dept Phys & Astron, Athens, GA 30602 USA
来源
PHYSICAL REVIEW A | 2015年 / 91卷 / 02期
关键词
ATOMS;
D O I
10.1103/PhysRevA.91.023432
中图分类号
O43 [光学];
学科分类号
070207 ; 0803 ;
摘要
We propose and study a model of forced evaporation of atomic clouds in crossed-beam optical dipole traps that explicitly includes the growth of a population in the "wings" of the trap and its subsequent impact on dimple temperature and density. It has long been surmised that a large wing population is an impediment to the efficient production of Bose-Einstein condensates in crossed-beam traps. Understanding the effect of the wings is particularly important for lambda = 1.06 mu m traps, for which a large ratio of Rayleigh range to beam waist results in wings that are large in volume and extend far from the dimple. Key ingredients to our model's realism are (1) our explicit treatment of the nonthermal, time-dependent energy distribution of wing atoms in the full anharmonic potential and (2) our accurate estimations of transition rates among dimple, wing, and free-atom populations, obtained with Monte Carlo simulations of atomic trajectories. We apply our model to trap configurations in which neither, one, or both of the wing potentials are made unbound by applying a "tipping" gradient. We find that forced evaporation in a trap with two bound wing potentials produces a large wing population which can collisionally heat the dimple so strongly as to preclude reaching quantum degeneracy. Evaporation in a trap with one unbound wing, such as that made by crossing one vertical beam and one horizontal beam, also leads to a persistent wing population which dramatically degrades the evaporation process. However, a trap with both wings tilted so as to be just unbound enjoys a nearly complete recovery of efficient evaporation. By introducing to our physical model an ad hoc, tunable escape channel for wing atoms, we study the effect of partially filled wings, finding that a wing population caused by single-beam potentials can drastically slow down evaporative cooling and increase the sensitivity to the choice of eta.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 13 条
  • [1] EVAPORATIVE COOLING IN A CROSSED DIPOLE TRAP
    ADAMS, CS
    LEE, HJ
    DAVIDSON, N
    KASEVICH, M
    CHU, S
    [J]. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS, 1995, 74 (18) : 3577 - 3580
  • [2] All-optical Bose-Einstein condensation in a 1.06 μm dipole trap
    Arnold, K. J.
    Barrett, M. D.
    [J]. OPTICS COMMUNICATIONS, 2011, 284 (13) : 3288 - 3291
  • [3] All-optical production of chromium Bose-Einstein condensates
    Beaufils, Q.
    Chicireanu, R.
    Zanon, T.
    Laburthe-Tolra, B.
    Marechal, E.
    Vernac, L.
    Keller, J. -C.
    Gorceix, O.
    [J]. PHYSICAL REVIEW A, 2008, 77 (06):
  • [4] All-optical runaway evaporation to Bose-Einstein condensation
    Clement, J. -F.
    Brantut, J. -P.
    Robert-de-Saint-Vincent, M.
    Nyman, R. A.
    Aspect, A.
    Bourdel, T.
    Bouyer, P.
    [J]. PHYSICAL REVIEW A, 2009, 79 (06):
  • [5] Optimized production of large Bose-Einstein condensates
    Comparat, D
    Fioretti, A
    Stern, G
    Dimova, E
    Tolra, BL
    Pillet, P
    [J]. PHYSICAL REVIEW A, 2006, 73 (04):
  • [6] AN ANALYTICAL MODEL FOR EVAPORATIVE COOLING OF ATOMS
    DAVIS, KB
    MEWES, MO
    KETTERLE, W
    [J]. APPLIED PHYSICS B-LASERS AND OPTICS, 1995, 60 (2-3): : 155 - 159
  • [7] Optical dipole traps for neutral atoms
    Grimm, R
    Weidemüller, M
    Ovchinnikov, YB
    [J]. ADVANCES IN ATOMIC MOLECULAR, AND OPTICAL PHYSICS, VOL. 42, 2000, 42 : 95 - 170
  • [8] Accelerating evaporative cooling of atoms into Bose-Einstein condensation in optical traps
    Hung, Chen-Lung
    Zhang, Xibo
    Gemelke, Nathan
    Chin, Cheng
    [J]. PHYSICAL REVIEW A, 2008, 78 (01):
  • [9] Ketterle W, 1996, ADV ATOM MOL OPT PHY, V37, P181
  • [10] All-optical Bose-Einstein condensation using a compressible crossed dipole trap
    Kinoshita, T
    Wenger, T
    Weiss, DS
    [J]. PHYSICAL REVIEW A, 2005, 71 (01):