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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

Ion Crystals Produced by Laser and Sympathetic Cooling in a Linear RF Ion Trap

Zhu, Feng 2010 December 1900 (has links)
A detailed investigation of ion crystals produced by laser and sympathetic cooling in a linear RF trap has been conducted. The laser cooling methods were examined and applied to the trapped ^24Mg^(positive) ions. The crystals produced by the laser cooling were studied, including the dependence on RF voltage, end cap DC voltage, laser power and laser frequency. By manipulating the different RF voltages and endcap DC voltages, the structure phase transition of the ion crystals was observed. In addition, the sympathetic cooling of different ion species with the laser cooled 24Mg^(positive) was carried out. In this process, the mixed Mg^(positive) and He^(positive) crystals were created andidentified, and mixed Mg^(positive) and H2^(positive) crystals were produced. The effect of an unwanted chemical reaction of Mg^(positive) and H2 was observed and minimized. After sympathetic cooling of light ion species, the sympathetic cooling of heavy molecular ions such as fullerene ions was also carried out. The efficiencies and final temperature in both cases are very different. Theoretically to interpret the results, molecular dynamics simulations of the laser cooling and sympathetic cooling were implemented. And the simulations were compared with the experimental results. In the process of carrying out this research, the optics were rebuilt to provide reliable UV sources for the photoionization and laser cooling of Mg ions. The imaging system was reconfigured to take the images of ion crystals. New elements were added tin the ion trap to improve the ability to manipulate ions.
2

Laser cooling and sympathetic cooling in a linear quadrupole rf trap

Ryjkov, Vladimir Leonidovich 17 February 2005 (has links)
An investigation of the sympathetic cooling method for the studies of large ultra-cold molecular ions in a quadrupole ion trap has been conducted.Molecular dynamics simulations are performed to study the rf heating mechanisms in the ion trap. The dependence of rf heating rates on the ion temperature, trapping parameters, and the number of ions is obtained. New rf heating mechanism affecting ultra-cold ion clouds exposed to laser radiation is described.The saturation spectroscopy setup of the hyperfine spectra of the molecular iodine has been built to provide an accurate frequency reference for the laser wavelength. This reference is used to obtain the fluorescence lineshapes of the laser cooled Mg$^+$ ions under different trapping conditions.The ion temperatures are deduced from the measurements, and the influence of the rf heating rates on the fluorescence lineshapes is also discussed. Cooling of the heavy ($m=720$a.u.) fullerene ions to under 10K by the means of the sympathetic cooling by the Mg$^+$ ions($m=24$a.u.) is demonstrated. The single-photon imaging system has been developed and used to obtain the images of the Mg$^+$ ion crystal structures at mK temperatures.
3

Production of state-selected H2+ ions and numerical simulations of sympathetic cooling in RF traps / Production de source sélectives des ions H2+ et simulations numériques de refroidissement sympathique dans les pièges de radio fréquence

Sillitoe, Nicolas 16 November 2017 (has links)
La spectroscopie ro-vibrationelle de haute résolution de l’ion moleculaire H2+ par REMPD requiert une source sélective en état interne. Dans cette thèse nous présentons notre travail de conception et de réalisation d’une telle source utilisant la photo-ionisation multiphotonique résonante (REMPI) de H2 à l’aide d’un laser pulsé à 303 nm.Dans un deuxième temps nous présentons nos simulations numériques de refroidissement sympathique dans un piège de Paul linéaire, avec pour application principale le projet GBAR qui implique le refroidissement sympathique d’un ion d’antimatière H̄+ par des ions Be+ refroidis par laser. Nous avons dévelopé un code GPU utilisant un pas de temps variable permettant de décrire les interactions coulombiennes de façon efficace. Nous discutons de l’influence du chauffage RF et de lois d’échelles entre le temps de capture, l’énergie initiale et le nombre d’ions dans le cristal. Nous montrons que le refroidissement sympathique de H̄ requis pour GBAR pourrait fonctionner avec un cristal dissymétrique de Be+/HD+ qui semble plus efficace que le Be+ seul. Nous montrons qu’avec un tel cristal la capture du H̄+ pourrait être détectée expérimentalement par analyse de Fourier des données de fluorescence. / The high-resolution ro-vibrational spectroscopy of the H2+ molecular ion by resonance-enhanced multiphoton dissociation (REMPD) requires a state-selective source of H2+. In this thesis we present work on a functional state selective H2+ ion source using resonance enhanced multiphoton ionisation (REMPI) with a 303 nm pulsed laser.The second part of the thesis presents numerical simulations of sympathetic cooling in linear RF traps, whose main application is the GBAR project (Gravitational Behaviour of Antihydrogen at Rest) which involves sympathetic cooling of an antimatter H̄+ ion by laser-cooled Be+ ions. We developed a GPU code using a variable timestep technique enabling a fast description of Coulomb interactions. We discuss the influence of RF heating and scaling laws between cooling times, initial energy and ion numbers in the cooling crystal. We show that the H̄ sympathetic cooling step of GBAR could be feasible using a rotationally asymmetric two-component Be+/HD+ crystal which appears more effective than a single-component Be+ crystal. We find that the H̄+ ion’s capture by this crystal could be detected experimentally by Fourier analysis of the fluorescence data.
4

A trapped single ion inside a Bose-Einstein condensate

Zipkes, Christoph January 2011 (has links)
In recent years, improved control of the motional and internal quantum states of ultracold neutral atoms and ions has opened intriguing possibilities for quantum simulation and quantum computation. Many-body effects have been explored with hundreds of thousands of quantum-degenerate neutral atoms and coherent light-matter interfaces have been built. Systems of single or a few trapped ions have been used to demonstrate universal quantum computing algorithms and to detect variations of fundamental constants in precision atomic clocks. Now in our experiment we investigate how the two systems can be advantageously combined. We immerse a single trapped Yb+ ion in a Bose-Einstein condensate of Rb atoms. Our hybrid setup consists of a linear RF-Paul trap which is overlapped with a magnetic trap and an optical dipole trap for the neutral atoms. A first synergetic effect is the sympathetic cooling of the trapped ions to very low temperatures through collisions with the ultracold neutral gas and thus without applying laser light to the ions. We observe the dynamics of this effect by measuring the mean ion energy after having an initially hot ion immersed into the condensate for various interaction times, while at the same time monitoring the effects of the collisions on the condensate. The observed ion cooling effect calls for further research into the possibility of using such hybrid systems for the continuous cooling of quantum computers. To this end a good understanding of the fundamental interaction processes between the ion and the neutrals is essential. We investigate the energy dependent elastic scattering properties by measuring neutral atom losses and temperature increase from an ultracold thermal cloud of Rb. By comparison with a Monte-Carlo simulation we gain a deeper understanding of how the different parameters affect the collisional effects. Additionally, we observe charge exchange reactions at the single particle level and measure the energy-independent reaction rate constants. The reaction products are identified by in-trap mass spectrometry, revealing the branching ratio between radiative and non-radiative charge exchange processes.
5

Fermions and Bosons on an Atom Chip

Extavour, Marcius H. T. 18 February 2010 (has links)
Ultra-cold dilute gases of neutral atoms are attractive candidates for creating controlled mesoscopic quantum systems. In particular, quantum degenerate gases of bosonic and fermionic atoms can be used to model the correlated many-body behaviour of Bose and Fermi condensed matter systems, and to study matter wave interference and coherence. This thesis describes the experimental realization and manipulation of Bose-Einstein condensates (BECs) of 87Rb and degenerate Fermi gases (DFGs) of 40K using static and dynamic magnetic atom chip traps. Atom chips are versatile modern tools used to manipulate atomic gases. The chips consist of micrometre-scale conductors supported by a planar insulating substrate, and can be used to create confining potentials for neutral atoms tens or hundreds of micrometres from the chip surface. We demonstrate for the first time that a DFG can be produced via sympathetic cooling with a BEC using a simple single-vacuum-chamber apparatus. The large 40K-87Rb collision rate afforded by the strongly confining atom chip potential permits rapid cooling of 40K to quantum degeneracy via sympathetic cooling with 87Rb. By studying 40K-87Rb cross-thermalization as a function of temperature, we observe the Ramsauer-Townsend reduction in the 40K-87Rb elastic scattering cross-section. We achieve DFG temperatures as low as T = 0.1TF , and observe Fermi pressure in the time-of-flight expansion of the gas. This thesis also describes the radio-frequency (RF) manipulation of trapped atoms to create dressed state double-well potentials for BEC and DFG.We demonstrate for the first time that RF-dressed potentials are species-selective, permitting the formation of simultaneous 87Rb double-well and 40K single-well potentials using a 40K-87Rb mixture. We also develop tools to measure fluctuations of the relative atom number and relative phase of a dynamically split 87Rb BEC. In particular, we observe atom number fluctuations at the shot-noise level using time-of-flight absorption imaging. These measurement tools lay the foundation for future investigations of number squeezing and matter wave coherence in BEC and DFG systems.
6

Fermions and Bosons on an Atom Chip

Extavour, Marcius H. T. 18 February 2010 (has links)
Ultra-cold dilute gases of neutral atoms are attractive candidates for creating controlled mesoscopic quantum systems. In particular, quantum degenerate gases of bosonic and fermionic atoms can be used to model the correlated many-body behaviour of Bose and Fermi condensed matter systems, and to study matter wave interference and coherence. This thesis describes the experimental realization and manipulation of Bose-Einstein condensates (BECs) of 87Rb and degenerate Fermi gases (DFGs) of 40K using static and dynamic magnetic atom chip traps. Atom chips are versatile modern tools used to manipulate atomic gases. The chips consist of micrometre-scale conductors supported by a planar insulating substrate, and can be used to create confining potentials for neutral atoms tens or hundreds of micrometres from the chip surface. We demonstrate for the first time that a DFG can be produced via sympathetic cooling with a BEC using a simple single-vacuum-chamber apparatus. The large 40K-87Rb collision rate afforded by the strongly confining atom chip potential permits rapid cooling of 40K to quantum degeneracy via sympathetic cooling with 87Rb. By studying 40K-87Rb cross-thermalization as a function of temperature, we observe the Ramsauer-Townsend reduction in the 40K-87Rb elastic scattering cross-section. We achieve DFG temperatures as low as T = 0.1TF , and observe Fermi pressure in the time-of-flight expansion of the gas. This thesis also describes the radio-frequency (RF) manipulation of trapped atoms to create dressed state double-well potentials for BEC and DFG.We demonstrate for the first time that RF-dressed potentials are species-selective, permitting the formation of simultaneous 87Rb double-well and 40K single-well potentials using a 40K-87Rb mixture. We also develop tools to measure fluctuations of the relative atom number and relative phase of a dynamically split 87Rb BEC. In particular, we observe atom number fluctuations at the shot-noise level using time-of-flight absorption imaging. These measurement tools lay the foundation for future investigations of number squeezing and matter wave coherence in BEC and DFG systems.
7

Mixtures of ultracold gases: Fermi sea and Bose-Einstein condensate of Lithium isotopes

Schreck, Florian 21 January 2002 (has links) (PDF)
Cette thèse décrit l'étude des gaz de fermions $^6$Li et de bosons<br />$^7$Li dans le régime quantique à très basse température. Le<br />refroidissement est obtenu par évaporation du $^7$Li dans un piège<br />magnétique très confinant. Puisque le refroidissement évaporatif<br />d'un gaz de fermion polarisé est quasiment impossible, le $^6$Li<br />est refroidi sympathiquement par contact thermique avec le $^7$Li.<br />Dans une première série d'expériences, les propriétés des gaz<br />quantiques dans les états hyperfins les plus élevés, piégés<br />magnétiquement, sont étudiées. Un gaz de $10^5$ fermions a une<br />température de 0.25(5) fois la température de Fermi ($T_F$) est<br />obtenu. L'instabilité du condensat pour plus de 300 atomes<br />condensés, à cause des interactions attractives, limite la<br />dégénérescence que l'on peut atteindre. Pour s'affranchir de cette<br />limite, une autre série d'expérience est menée dans les états<br />hyperfins bas, piégeable magnétiquement, où les interactions entre<br />bosons sont faiblement répulsives. Les collisions<br />inter-isotopiques permettent alors la thermalisation du mélange.<br />Le mélange d'un condensat de Bose-Einstein (CBE) de $^7$Li et d'un<br />mer de Fermi de $^6$Li est produit. Le condensat est quasi<br />unidimensionnel et la fraction thermique peut être négligeable. La<br />dégénérescence atteinte correspond à $T/T_C=T/T_F=0.2(1)$. La<br />température est mesurée à partir de la fraction thermique des<br />bosons qui disparaît aux plus basses températures, et limite notre<br />précision de mesure. Dans une troisième série d'expérience, les<br />bosons sont transférés dans un piège optique, et placé dans l'état<br />interne $|F=1,m_F=1\rangle$, l'état fondamental pour les bosons.<br />Une résonance de Feshbach est repérée puis exploitée pour former<br />un condensai où les interactions sont ajustables. Quand les<br />interactions effectives entre les atomes sont attractives, on<br />observe la formation d'un soliton brillant de matière. La<br />propagation de ce soliton sans dispersion sur une distance de<br />$1.1\,$mm est observée.

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