Bose-Einstein condensation by polarization gradient laser cooling
Abstract
Attempts to create quantum degenerate gases without evaporative cooling have been pursued since the early days of laser cooling, with the consensus that polarization gradient cooling (PGC, also known as "optical molasses") alone cannot reach condensation. In the present work, we report that simple PGC can generate a small Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) inside a corrugated micrometer-sized optical dipole trap. The experimental parameters enabling BEC creation were found by machine learning, which increased the atom number by a factor of 5 and decreased the temperature by a factor of 2.5, corresponding to almost two orders of magnitude gain in phase space density. When the trapping light is slightly misaligned through a microscopic objective lens, a BEC of Rb atoms is formed inside a local dimple within 40 ms of PGC.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2312.07708,
title = {Bose-Einstein condensation by polarization gradient laser cooling},
author = {Wenchao Xu and Tamara Šumarac and Emily H. Qiu and Matthew L. Peters and Sergio H. Cantú and Zeyang Li and Adrian J. Menssen and Mikhail D. Lukin and Simone Colombo and Vladan Vuletić},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2312.07708},
year = {2024}
}
Comments
8 pages, 6 figures