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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Towards the creation of Fock states of atoms

Kelkar, Hrishikesh Vidyadhar 19 October 2009 (has links)
Ultracold atoms have been successfully used to study numerous systems, previously unaccessible, but a precise control over the atom number of the sample still remains a challenge. This dissertation describes our progress towards achieving Fock states of atoms. The first three chapters cover the basic physics necessary to understand the techniques we use in our lab to manipulate atoms. We then summarize our experimental results from an earlier setup where we did two experiments. In the first experiment we compare the transport of cold atoms and a Bose Einstein Condensate (BEC) in a periodic potential. We find a critical potential height beyond which the condensate behavior deviates significantly from that of thermal atoms. In the second experiment we study the effect of periodic temporal kicks by a spatially periodic potential on a BEC in a quasi one dimensional trap. We observe a limit on the energy that the system can absorb from the kicks, which we conclude is due to the finite height of the trap rather than quantum effects. The majority of the dissertation discusses our experimental setup designed to produce Fock states. The setup is designed to use the method of laser culling to produce Fock states. We are able to create a BEC and transport it into a glass cell 25 cm away. We tried different innovative methods to reduce vibrations during transport before finally settling to a commercial air bearing translation stage. We create a high confinement one dimensional optical trap using the Hermite Gaussian TEM₀₁ mode of a laser beam. Such a trap gives trapping frequencies comparable to an optical lattice and allows us to create a single one dimensional trap. We creating the TEM₀₁ mode using an appropriate phase object (phase plate) in the path of a TEM₀₀ mode beam. The method for producing the phase plate was very well controlled to obtain a good quality mode. Once the atoms are loaded into this one dimensional trap we can proceed to do laser culling to observe Sub-Poissonian number statistics and eventually create Fock states of few atoms. Finally, we describe a novel method to create a real time tunable optical lattice which would provide us with the ability of spatially resolved single atom detection. The majority of the dissertation discusses our experimental setup designed to produce Fock states. The setup is designed to use the method of laser culling to produce Fock states. We are able to create a BEC and transport it into a glass cell 25 cm away. We tried different innovative methods to reduce vibrations during tr₀ansport before finally settling to a commercial air bearing translation stage. We create a high confinement one dimensional optical trap using the Hermite Gaussian TEM₀₁ mode of a laser beam. Such a trap gives trapping frequencies comparable to an optical lattice and allows us to create a single one dimensional trap. We creating the TEM₀₁ mode using an appropriate phase object (phase plate) in the path of a TEM₀₀ mode beam. The method for producing the phase plate was very well controlled to obtain a good quality mode. Once the atoms are loaded into this one dimensional trap we can proceed to do laser culling to observe Sub-Poissonian number statistics and eventually create Fock states of few atoms. Finally, we describe a novel method to create a real time tunable optical lattice which would provide us with the ability of spatially resolved single atom detection. The majority of the dissertation discusses our experimental setup designed to produce Fock states. The setup is designed to use the method of laser culling to produce Fock states. We are able to create a BEC and transport it into a glass cell 25 cm away. We tried different innovative methods to reduce vibrations during transport before finally settling to a commercial air bearing translation stage. We create a high confinement one dimensional optical trap using the Hermite Gaussian TEM₀₁ mode of a laser beam. Such a trap gives trapping frequencies comparable to an optical lattice and allows us to create a single one dimensional trap. We creating the TEM₀₁ mode using an appropriate phase object (phase plate) in the path of a TEM₀₀ mode beam. The method for producing the phase plate was very well controlled to obtain a good quality mode. Once the atoms are loaded into this one dimensional trap we can proceed to do laser culling to observe Sub-Poissonian number statistics and eventually create Fock states of few atoms. Finally, we describe a novel method to create a real time tunable optical lattice which would provide us with the ability of spatially resolved single atom detection. The majority of the dissertation discusses our experimental setup designed to produce Fock states. The setup is designed to use the method of laser culling to produce Fock states. We are able to create a BEC and transport it into a glass cell 25 cm away. We tried different innovative methods to reduce vibrations during transport before finally settling to a commercial air bearing translation stage. We create a high confinement one dimensional optical trap using the Hermite Gaussian TEM₀₁ mode of a laser beam. Such a trap gives trapping frequencies comparable to an optical lattice and allows us to create a single one dimensional trap. We creating the TEM₀₁ mode using an appropriate phase object (phase plate) in the path of a TEM₀₀ mode beam. The method for producing the phase plate was very well controlled to obtain a good quality mode. Once the atoms are loaded into this one dimensional trap we can proceed to do laser culling to observe Sub-Poissonian number statistics and eventually create Fock states of few atoms. Finally, we describe a novel method to create a real time tunable optical lattice which would provide us with the ability of spatially resolved single atom detection. / text
2

Atomic Fock states and quantum computing

Wan, Shoupu 22 October 2009 (has links)
The potential impact of quantum computing has stimulated a worldwide effort to develop the necessary experimental and theoretical resources. In the race for the quantum computer, several candidate systems have emerged, but the ultimate system is still unclear. We study theoretically how to realize atomic Fock states both for fermionic and bosonic atoms, mainly in one-dimensional optical traps. We demonstrate a new approach of quantum computing based on ultracold fermionic atomic Fock states in optical traps. With the Pauli exclusion principle, producing fermionic atomic Fock states in optical traps is straightforward. We find that laser culling of fermionic atoms in optical traps can produce a scalable number of ultra-high fidelity qubits. We show how each qubit can be independently prepared, and how to perform the required entanglement operations and detect the qubit states with spatially resolved, single-atom detection with adiabatic trap-splitting and fluorescence imaging. On the other hand, bosonic atoms have a strong tendency to stay together. One must rely on strong repulsive interactions to produce bosonic atomic Fock states. To simulate the physical conditions of producing Fock states with ultracold bosonic atoms, we study a many-boson system with arbitrary interaction strength using the Bethe ansatz method. This approach provides a general framework, enabling the study of Fock state production over a wide range of realistic experimental parameters. / text
3

Experiments to control atom number and phase-space density in cold gases

Viering, Kirsten 20 November 2012 (has links)
This dissertation presents the development and implementation of two novel experimental techniques for controlling atom number and phase-space density in cold atomic gases. The first experiment demonstrates the method of single-photon cooling, an optical realization of Maxwell's demon, using an ensemble of rubidium atoms. Single-photon cooling increases the phase-space density of a cloud of magnetically trapped atoms, reducing the entropy of the ensemble by irreversibly transferring atoms through a one-way wall via a single-photon scattering event. While traditional laser cooling methods are limited in their applicability to a small number of atoms, single-photon cooling is much more general and should in principle be applicable to almost all atoms in the periodic table. The experiment described in this dissertation demonstrates a one-dimensional implementation of the cooling scheme. Complete phase-space compression along this dimension is observed. The limitations on the cooling performance are shown to be given by trap dynamics in the magnetic trap. The second part of this dissertation is dedicated to the experiment built to control the atom number of a degenerate Fermi gas on a single particle level. Creating Fock states of atoms with ultra-high fidelity is a mandatory step for studying quantum entanglement on a single atom level. The experimental technique implemented to control the atom number in this experiment is called laser culling. Decreasing the trapping potential reduces the atom number in a controlled way, giving precise control over the number of atoms remaining in the trap. This dissertation details the design and construction of this experiment and reports on the progress towards the creation of neutral lithium Fock states. / text
4

Towards the creation of high-fidelity Fock states of neutral atoms

Medellin Salas, David de Jesus 25 September 2013 (has links)
This dissertation presents the implementation of a technique to generate atomic Fock states of Lithium 6 with ultra-high fidelity, called laser culling. Fock states, atomic states with a definite number of particles, are a mandatory step for studying few-body quantum phenomena such as quantum tunneling, quantum entanglement, and serve as building blocks for quantum simulators. The creation of ultra-high fidelity Fock states begins with a degenerate Fermi gas in an optical dipole trap. Being fermions, lithium-6 atoms fill the energy levels of the dipole trap with 2 atoms per energy level. Introducing a magnetic field gradient creates a linear potential that tilts the potential produced by the optical dipole trap. The initially bound energy levels become quasi-bound states, each with a different lifetime. By exploiting the difference between these lifetimes, one can generate a single pair of atoms in the ground state of the trap with fidelities that can exceed 99.9%. This dissertation first presents the details of the design and construction of an apparatus for laser culling, and then reports on the progress made towards the creation of atomic Fock states with ultra-high fidelity. / text

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