English

A Cold Atomic Beam Interferometer

Atomic Physics 2015-06-18 v2

Abstract

We demonstrate an atom interferometer that uses a laser-cooled continuous beam of 87^{87}Rb atoms having velocities of 10--20 m/s. With spatially separated Raman beams to coherently manipulate the atomic wave packets, Mach--Zehnder interference fringes are observed at an interference distance of 2L = 19 mm. The apparatus operates within a small enclosed area of 0.07 mm2^2 at a bandwidth of 190 Hz with a deduced sensitivity of 7.8×1057.8\times10^{-5} rad/s/Hz\sqrt{{Hz}} for rotations. Using a low-velocity continuous atomic source in an atom interferometer enables high sampling rates and bandwidths without sacrificing sensitivity and compactness, which are important for applications in real dynamic environments.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1402.3822,
  title  = {A Cold Atomic Beam Interferometer},
  author = {H. B. Xue and Y. Y. Feng and S. Chen and X. J. Wang and X. S. Yan and Z. K. Jiang and Z. Y. Zhou},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1402.3822},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

16 pages, 5 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-22T03:09:15.279Z