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Contrôle par laser de la formation de molécules polaires paramagnétiques ultra-froides / Laser control of the formation of ultracold paramagnetic polar moleculesDevolder, Adrien 08 October 2019 (has links)
La thèse se positionne dans le domaine des molécules ultra-froides, c’est-à-dire des molécules qui ont des vitesses correspondant à des températures de l’ordre du µK. L’obtention de gaz dilués moléculaires à ces températures peut ouvrir la porte à des applications importantes en simulation ou en informatique quantique. La thèse s’intéresse plus particulièrement à la formation de molécules dipolaires électriques et magnétiques. Celles-ci sont présagées pour être un système idéal dans l’optique d’un simulateur quantique du système réseau-spin, permettant de décrire le magnétisme dans les solides. Nous avons choisi l’exemple de la molécule RbSr qui fait l’objet actuellement d’une expérience à Amsterdam. Nous avons donc exploré plusieurs alternatives basées sur l’emploi de laser pour la formation de molécules RbSr ultra-froides Nous avons d’abord considéré la photoassociation dont le principe est de coupler l’état de collision initial avec un état rovibrationnel d’un état électronique excité. L’étape d’émission spontanée qui suit forme des molécules dans l’état électronique fondamental. Nous avons également considéré le problème des pertes supplémentaires d’atomes lorsque le laser de photoassociation est intense et focalisé, mises en évidence dans une expérience à Bangalore. Dans la suite de la thèse, nous avons exploré des méthodes cohérentes. Nous avons montré que des molécules faiblement liées de RbSr peuvent être formées à l’aide d’un STIRAP en partant de paires d’atomes isolées et confinées dans un isolant de Mott. Nous avons ensuite étudié leur stabilisation vers le niveau le plus profond de l’état fondamental de la molécule à l’aide d’un second STIRAP. Enfin, nous avons étudié des méthodes se déroulant uniquement dans l’état électronique fondamental. La formation est induite par l’utilisation d’une impulsion à dérive de fréquence induisant un passage adiabatique ou à l’aide d’une impulsion-pi. En plus, nous avons découvert que cette méthode formation peut être reliée à une résonance de Feshbach dans la représentation habillée par les photons, que nous avons appelée Résonance de Feshbach auto-induité assistée par Laser (LASIFR en anglais). Nous montrons qu’elles sont un outil prometteur et puissant pour le contrôle des propriétés de mélange de gaz d’atomes ultra-froids, comme par exemple la longueur de diffusion. / The thesis is positioned in the ultracold domain, i.e molecules which have velocities corresponding to microkelvin temperatures. The formation of molecular diluted gas at these temperatures is promising for important applications in quantum simulation, quantum information or in precision measurements.More particularly, the thesis is focused on the formation of molecules which are polar and paramagnetic. Some recent works are predicted that these molecules could be the ideal system for creating a quantum simulator of the lattice-spin system, which can describe the magnetism in solids. We have chosen the example of RbSr molecules for whose an experience runs in Amsterdam. We explored some alternatives based on the use of lasers for the formation of ultracold RbSr molecules.First, we considered the photoassociation whose the principle is coupling the initial scattering state with a rovibrational level of an excited electronic state. The following spontaneous emission step creates molecules in the electronic ground state. We also considered the problem of atom losses observed by experiments in Bangalore, when a focused photoassociation laser is applied. In the rest of the thesis, we explored coherent methods. Firstly, we showed a STIRAP sequence could create weakly bound molecules from isolated atomic pairs confined in a Mott insulator. Lastly, we explored some of these methods where the dynamic occurs only in the electronic ground state. The formation is induced by the use of a chirped pulse or a pi-pulse. We studied the factors of the transfer. Moreover, we discovered this method is related to a new kind of Feshbach resonances in the photon dressed picture, called Laser Assisted Self-Induced Feshbach Resonance (LASIFR). We showed LASIFR present the advantages of Magnetic and Optical Feshbach Resonances. They are a promising and powerful tool for the control of properties of quantum gas mixtures, like the interspecies scattering length.
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Electron screening and disorder-induced heating in ultracold neutral plasmasLyon, Mary Elizabeth 01 December 2011 (has links) (PDF)
Disorder-induced heating (DIH) is a nonequilibrium, ultrafast relaxation process that occurs when laser-cooled atoms are photoionized to make an ultracold plasma. Its effects dominate the ion motion during the first 100 ns of the plasma evolution. Using tools of atomic physics we study DIH with ns time resolution for different plasma densities and temperatures. By changing the frequency of the laser beam we use to probe the ions, we map out the time evolution of the velocity distribution. We can compare this to a fluorescence simulation in order to more clearly determine the relationship between the fluorescence signal and the velocity distribution. In this study we observe and characterize effects due to electron screening on the ions during the equilibration process.
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Numerical Calculations of Efimov States in Ultracold Atomic Systems / Numerisk Beräkning av Efimovtillstånd i System av Ultrakalla AtomerBlomdahl, Kajsa-My January 2016 (has links)
In systems of ultracold atoms, the quantum Efimov effect can appear where identical bosons form an infinite tower of bound trimer states in the resonant limit, at the bound dimer dissociation threshold. The most characteristic feature of this effect is that their energy spectrum obey a geometric scaling law, which is universal in the sense that it emerges irrespective of the nature of the two body forces. Using a model potential, constructed to resemble the two body interaction between alkali atoms, which was fine tuned to control the scattering length, energy eigenvalues for the two- and threebody problem were calculated numerically. The results where fitted to the analytic theory and the appearance of the first Efimov state was positioned at a scattering length of -9.23rvdW , which is in good agreement with the universal value -9.2rvdW . / I system av ultrakalla atomer kan en kvanteffekt, kallad Efimoveffekt, uppkomma där identiska bosoner bildar ett oändligt torn av bundna trekroppstillstånd då spridningslängden går mot oändligheten, vid dissociationströskeln för en svagt bunden dimer. Det mest utmärkande för denna effekt är att Efimovtillståndens energispektrum följer en geometrisk skalningslag, som är universell i den meningen att den framträder oberoende av hur atomernas parvisa växelverkan ser ut. Med hjälp av en modellpotential som konstruerats för att efterlikna den parvisa växelverkan mellan två alkaliatomer finjusterades spridningslängden. Energiegenvärdena för två- och tre-kropps problemen beräknades numeriskt vid olika spridningslängder. Resultaten jämfördes med den analytiska teorin och den första tre-kroppsresonansen uppkom vid spridningslängden -9.23rvdW , vilket överenstämmer med det experimentellt funna universella värdet -9.2rvdW .
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Temperature Relaxation and Magnetically Suppressed Expansion in Strongly Coupled Ultracold Neutral PlasmasSprenkle, Robert Tucker 21 December 2021 (has links)
Ultracold neutral plasmas provide a platform for studying transport properties in an idealized environment. In this dissertation, transport properties in a Ca$^+$/Yb$^+$ dual species ultracold neutral plasma and a Ca$^+$ magnetized ultracold neutral plasma are studied. In dual species plasmas, we study ion-ion temperature relaxation. We compare measured relaxation rates with atomistic simulations and a range of popular theories. Our work validates the assumptions and capabilities of molecular dynamic simulations and invalidates theoretical models in this regime. This work illustrates an approach for precision determinations of detailed material properties in Coulomb mixtures across a wide range of conditions. We also study plasma expansion in single species plasma in the presence of a strong uniform magnetic field. We find that the asymptotic expansion velocity falls exponentially with magnetic field strength, which disagrees with a previously published ambipolar diffusion model. In the parallel direction, plasma expansion is driven by electron pressure. However, in the perpendicular direction, no plasma expansion is observed at large magnetic field strengths.
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Polarized Ultracold Neutrons: their transport in diamond guides and potential to search for physics beyond the standard modelMakela, Mark F. 16 February 2005 (has links)
Experiments with polarized "ultracold neutrons" (UCN) offer a new way to measure the decay correlations of neutron beta decay; these correlations can be used to test the completeness of the Standard Model and predict physics beyond it. Ultracold neutrons are very low energy neutrons that can be trapped inside of material and magnetic bottles. The decay correlations in combination with the neutron and muon lifetimes experimentally find the first element (Vud) of the Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa (CKM) quark mixing matrix. The CKM matrix is a unitary transform between the mass and weak eigenstates of the d, s and b quarks; if the matrix is not unitary this would imply that the Standard Model is not complete. Currently the first row of the CKM matrix is over 2 sigma from unitarity and Vud is the largest component of the row.
The UCNA experiment looks at the correlation between the polarization of the neutron and the momentum of the electron resulting from the beta decay of the neutron (the A-correlation). The keys to making a high precision measurement of A-correlation are a near 100% polarization of the neutrons that decay, low"backscatter electron detectors, and small, well characterized backgrounds. UCN can be 100% polarized by passing them through a seven Telsa magnetic field. The key to the UCNA experiment is keeping them polarized until they decay or are lost.
This dissertation covers the development of guides that are minimally depolarizing and efficient transporters of UCN and their use in the UCNA experiment. The entire guide development process is covered from conception to manufacturing and testing. This process includes development of a pulsed laser deposition, diamond-like carbon coating system and materials studies of the resulting coatings. After the initial studies of the guide coating, meter"long sections of guide are tested with UCN to determine their depolarization and transport properties.
The guide technology developed in this dissertation has been used in the entire UCNA experiment. Also, this technology is currently the state of the art for polarized and non-polarized UCN guide systems and it is being implemented in several new UCN experiments. / Ph. D.
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PROGRESS TOWARD THE FESHBACH ASSOCIATION OF LITHIUM AND CESIUM ATOMS IN OPTICAL TWEEZER ARRAYSDavid Peana (19165717) 19 July 2024 (has links)
<p dir="ltr">Abstract: The field of singly-trapped ultracold molecules has expanded rapidly in the past few years. With the introduction of fast tweezer rearrangement and the demonstrated viability of ground-state preparation by magneto-association coupled with STIRAP, powerful and robust arrays of ultracold molecules for quantum information science are finally being realized after decades of research. This dissertation primarily discusses the engineering associated with the conventional path toward creating arrays of LiCs molecules trapped in optical tweezers. Scientific results of the successful trapping and sub-doppler cooling of both atoms to release-recapture temperatures of less than 100uK are discussed. Discussed is also recent unpublished work focusing on atomic state preparation in optical tweezers, merging of the two species, and observation of Feshbach resonances of the pairs of atoms.</p>
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Universal Efimov physics in three- and four-body collisionsWang, Yujun January 1900 (has links)
Doctor of Philosophy / Department of Physics / Brett D. Esry / The Efimov effect plays a central role in few-body systems at ultracold temperature and
has thus accelerated a lot of studies on its manifestation in the collisional stability of the quantum degenerate gases. Near broad Feshbach resonances, Efimov physics has been studied both theoretically and experimentally through the zero-energy scattering observables. We have extended the theoretical studies of Efimov physics to a much broader extent. In
particular, we have investigated the three-body Efimov physics near narrow Feshbach resonances and have also identified the Efimov features beyond the zero temperature limit. We
have found, near a narrow Feshbach resonance, the non-trivial contribution from both of the resonance width and the short-range physics to the three-body recombination and vibrational dimer relaxation. Remarkably, the collisional stability of the Feshbach molecules are found to be opposite to that near the broad resonances: an increased stability for molecules made by bosons and a decreased stability for those made by fermions. The universal physics observed near the narrow Feshbach resonances is further found not to be limited to the zero temperature observables. We have found that the general features of Efimov physics and
those pertaining to a narrow resonance are manifested in different energy ranges above zero temperature. This opens the opportunity to observe Efimov physics by changing the collisional energy while keeping the atomic interaction fixed. The landscape of the universal Efimov physics is thus delineated in both of the interaction and the energy domain. We have also investigated Efimov physics in heteronuclear four-body systems where the complexity can be reduced by approximations. In particular, we have proposed ways for controllable production of the Efimov tri-atomic molecules by three-body or four-body recombinations
involving four atoms. We have also confirmed the existence of four-body Efimov effect in
a system of three heavy particles and one light particle, which has resolved a decade-long controversy on this topic. Finally, we have studied the collisional properties of four identical bosons in 1D, which is important to the experiments on the quantum gases confined in the 1D optical lattices.
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A compact system for ultracold atomsTorralbo Campo, Lara January 2012 (has links)
This thesis describes the design, construction and optimisation of two compact setups to produce ⁸⁷Rb Bose-Einstein condensates and dual ⁷Li-⁸⁷Rb Magneto- Optical Traps (MOTs). The motivation for compact systems is to have simplified systems to cool the atoms. The first experimental setup is based on a single pyrex glass cell without the need for atom chips. Fast evaporation will be achieved in a hybrid trap comprising of a magnetic quadrupole trap and an optical dipole trap created by a Nd:YVO4 laser and with future plans of using a Spatial Light Modulator (SLM). To enhance an efficient and rapid evaporation, we have investigated Light-Induced Atomic Desorption (LIAD) to modulate the Rb partial pressure during the cooling and trapping stage. With this technique, a ⁸⁷Rb MOT of 7 x 10⁷ atoms was loaded by shining violet light from a LED source into the glass cell, whose walls are coated with rubidium atoms. The atoms were then cooled by optical molasses and then loaded into a magnetic trap where lifetime measurements demonstrated that LIAD improves on magnetically-trapped atoms loaded from constant background pressure by a factor of six. This is quite encouraging and opens the possibility to do a rapid evaporation. In a second experiment, we have designed a compact system based on a stainless steel chamber to trap either ⁷Li or ⁶Li atoms in a MOT loaded from alkali-metal dispensers without the need of conventional oven-Zeeman slower. This setup can also load ⁸⁷Rb atoms, allowing future projects to simultaneously produce degenerate quantum gases of bosonic ⁸⁷Rb and fermionic ⁶Li atoms.
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Alternative techniques for the production and manipulation of ultracold atomsBruce, Graham D. January 2012 (has links)
This Thesis contains details of the construction and characterisation of a compact apparatus for the cooling of ultracold atoms to quantum degeneracy, and their manipulation in flexible holographic optical traps. We have designed and built two iterations of this apparatus. The first version consists of a stainless steel single-cell vacuum chamber, in which we confine ⁸⁷Rb and ⁶Li or ⁷Li in a Magneto-Optical Trap. We characterise the alternative methods of pulsed atomic dispenser and Light Induced Atomic Desorption (LIAD) to rapidly vary the background pressure in the vacuum chamber with the view to enabling efficient evaporative cooling in the single chamber, loading MOTs of up to 10⁸ atoms using pulsed dispensers. The LIAD is found to be ineffective in loading large MOTs in this setup, while the pulsed dispensers method gradually increases the background pressure in the chamber over time. Based on the results of this first iteration, we designed and built a second single-chamber apparatus for cooling of ⁸⁷Rb to quantum degeneracy. The LIAD technique was used to successfully load MOTs containing 8x10⁷ atoms in this single pyrex cell with a rapidly-varying background pressure. The lifetime of an atomic cloud loaded from the MOT into a magnetic trap increased by a factor of 6 when LIAD was used. The holographic optical traps for cold atoms are generated using a Spatial Light Modulator, and we present our novel method for improving the quality of holographic light patterns to the point where they are suitable for trapping ultracold atoms using a feedback algorithm. As demonstrations of this new capability, we show power-law optical traps which provide an efficient, reversible route to Bose-Einstein Condensation and a dynamic ring trap for the investigation of superfluidity in cold atoms.
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Strong correlations in ultracold atomic gasesNunnenkamp, Andreas January 2008 (has links)
In this thesis we investigate strongly-correlated states of ultracold bosonic atoms in rotating ring lattices and arrays of double-well potentials. In the first part of the thesis, we study the tunneling dynamics of ultracold bosons in double-well potentials. In the non-interacting limit single-particle transitions dominate, while in the interaction-dominated regime correlated tunneling of all particles prevails. At intermediate times of the many-particle flopping process correlated states occur, but the timescales of these processes increase dramatically with the number of particles. Using an array of double-well potentials, a large number of such few-particle superposition states can be produced in parallel. In the second part of the thesis, we study the effects of rotation on ultracold bosons confined to one-dimensional ring lattices. We find that at commensurate filling there exists a critical rotation frequency, at which the ground state of the weakly-interacting gas is fragmented into a macroscopic superposition of different quasi-momentum states. We demonstrate that the generation of such superposition states using slightly non-uniform ring lattices has several practical advantages. Moreover, we show that different quasi-momentum states can be distinguished in time-of-flight absorption imaging and propose to probe correlations via the many-body oscillations induced by a sudden change in the rotation frequency. Finally, we compare these macroscopic superposition states to those occurring in superconducting quantum interference devices. In the third part of the thesis, we demonstrate the creation of entangled states with ultracold bosonic atoms by dynamical manipulation of the shape of the lattice potential. To this end, we consider an optical superlattice that allows both the splitting of each site into a double-well potential and the variation of the height of the potential barrier between the sites. We show how to use this array of double-well potentials to perform entangling operations between neighboring qubits encoded on the Zeeman levels of the atoms. As one possible application, we present a method of realizing a resource state for measurement-based quantum computation via Bell-pair measurements. In the final part of the thesis, we study ultracold bosons on a two-dimensional square lattice in the presence of an effective magnetic field and point out a couple of features this system has in common with ultracold bosons in one-dimensional rotating ring lattices.
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