English

An Intense, Continuous Cold Atom Source

Atomic Physics 2023-01-18 v1

Abstract

We demonstrate an intense, continuous cold atom beam generated via post nozzle seeding of a supersonic helium jet with 7^7Li atoms. The nozzle is cooled to about 4.4 K to reduce the forward velocity of the atoms. The atomic beam is brought to a focus 175 cm from the nozzle by a 10 cm bore diameter magnetic hexapole lens. Absorption and fluorescence imaging of the focus show a flux of 2.3(4)×10122.3(4) \times 10^{12} atoms/s, brightness of 4.1(7)×10194.1(7)\times 10^{19} m2s1sr1\textrm{m}^{-2}\textrm{s}^{-1}\textrm{sr}^{-1}, forward velocity of 211(2) m/s, and longitudinal temperature of 7(3) mK. Results agree with a Monte Carlo simulation of the seeding dynamics and a particle tracing simulation of the atom lens. We project that 10 times higher flux would be possible with improved vacuum system design. Our method should provide a useful high-brightness source for atom-optical and other atomic and molecular physics applications.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2208.10584,
  title  = {An Intense, Continuous Cold Atom Source},
  author = {William Huntington and Jeremy Glick and Michael Borysow and Daniel J. Heinzen},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2208.10584},
  year   = {2023}
}