Resolved Raman sideband cooling of a single optically trapped cesium
atom
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2311.17494v2
- Date: Mon, 1 Jan 2024 01:40:35 GMT
- Title: Resolved Raman sideband cooling of a single optically trapped cesium
atom
- Authors: Zhuangzhuang Tian, Haobo Chang, Xin Lv, Mengna Yang, Zhihui Wang,
Pengfei Yang, Pengfei Zhang, Gang Li, and Tiancai Zhang
- Abstract summary: A two-photon Raman process between two outermost Zeeman sublevels in a single hyperfine state is applied to reduce the phonon number.
Our scheme is less sensitive to the variation in the magnetic field than the commonly used scheme.
After cooling for 50 ms, 82% of the Cs atoms populate their three-dimensional ground states.
- Score: 22.585565798915038
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: We developed a resolved Raman sideband cooling scheme that can efficiently
prepare a single optically trapped cesium (Cs) atom in its motional ground
states. A two-photon Raman process between two outermost Zeeman sublevels in a
single hyperfine state is applied to reduce the phonon number. Our scheme is
less sensitive to the variation in the magnetic field than the commonly used
scheme where the two outermost Zeeman sublevels belonging to the two separate
ground hyperfine states are taken. Fast optical pumping with less spontaneous
emission guarantees the efficiency of the cooling process. After cooling for 50
ms, 82% of the Cs atoms populate their three-dimensional ground states. Our
scheme improves the long-term stability of Raman sideband cooling in the
presence of magnetic field drift and is thus suitable for cooling other trapped
atoms or ions with abundant magnetic sublevels.
Related papers
- An anti-maser for quantum-limited cooling of a microwave cavity [58.720142291102135]
We experimentally demonstrate how to generate a state in condensed matter at moderate cryogenic temperatures.
This state is then used to efficiently remove microwave photons from a cavity.
Such an "anti-maser" device could be extremely beneficial for applications that would normally require cooling to millikelvin temperatures.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-07-24T11:12:29Z) - A superradiant two-level laser with intrinsic light force generated gain [0.0]
We propose a new scenario for creating continuous gain by using optical forces acting on the states of a two-level atom.
We study minimal conditions on pump laser intensities and detunings required for collective superradiant emission.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-04-25T23:10:55Z) - Motional ground-state cooling of single atoms in state-dependent optical
tweezers [0.1631115063641726]
We study a novel laser cooling scheme for single atoms in optical tweezers.
The scheme exploits sequential addressing of red sideband transitions via frequency chirping of the cooling light.
It induces light-assisted collisions, which are key to the assembly of large atom arrays.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-02-08T08:33:19Z) - Stimulated Laser Cooling Using Microfabrication [4.188903452390429]
We have achieved stimulated laser cooling of thermal rubidium atomic beams on a silicon chip.
This hybrid of passive and active collimation paves the way toward the construction of full-fledged atomic instruments.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-08-26T17:04:33Z) - Quantum-limited millimeter wave to optical transduction [50.663540427505616]
Long distance transmission of quantum information is a central ingredient of distributed quantum information processors.
Current approaches to transduction employ solid state links between electrical and optical domains.
We demonstrate quantum-limited transduction of millimeter-wave (mmwave) photons into optical photons using cold $85$Rb atoms as the transducer.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-07-20T18:04:26Z) - Superior dark-state cooling via nonreciprocal couplings in trapped atoms [4.915587669065746]
Cooling trapped atoms toward their motional ground states is key to applications of quantum simulation and quantum computation.
We present an intriguing dark-state cooling scheme in $Lambda$-type three-level structure, which is shown superior than the conventional electromagnetically-induced-transparency cooling in a single atom.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-06-29T05:43:22Z) - Prospects for single photon sideband cooling of optically trapped
neutral atoms [0.0]
We propose a novel cooling scheme for realising single photon sideband cooling on particles trapped in a state-dependent optical potential.
We develop a master rate equation from an ab-initio model and find that it is possible to drastically reduce the average occupation number of the vibrational levels.
Our findings provide an alternative cooling scheme that can be applied in principle to any particle.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-07-08T21:24:35Z) - Algorithmic Ground-state Cooling of Weakly-Coupled Oscillators using
Quantum Logic [52.77024349608834]
We introduce a novel algorithmic cooling protocol for transferring phonons from poorly- to efficiently-cooled modes.
We demonstrate it experimentally by simultaneously bringing two motional modes of a Be$+$-Ar$13+$ mixed Coulomb crystal close to their zero-point energies.
We reach the lowest temperature reported for a highly charged ion, with a residual temperature of only $Tlesssim200mathrmmu K$ in each of the two modes.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-02-24T17:46:15Z) - Multimode-polariton superradiance via Floquet engineering [55.41644538483948]
We consider an ensemble of ultracold bosonic atoms within a near-planar cavity, driven by a far detuned laser.
We show that a strong, dispersive atom-photon coupling can be reached for many transverse cavity modes at once.
The resulting Floquet polaritons involve a superposition of a set of cavity modes with a density of excitation of the atomic cloud.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-11-24T19:00:04Z) - Photon-mediated entanglement scheme between a ZnO semiconductor defect
and a trapped Yb ion [58.720142291102135]
We propose an optical scheme to generate an entangled state between a trapped ion and a solid state donorbit.
We show that an entanglement rate of 21 kHz and entanglement fidelity of 94 % can be attained using a weak scheme with reasonable parameters.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-06-25T22:58:54Z) - Algorithmic Cooling of Nuclear Spin Pairs using a Long-Lived Singlet
State [48.7576911714538]
We show that significant cooling is achieved on an ensemble of spin-pair systems by exploiting the long-lived nuclear singlet state.
This is the first demonstration of algorithmic cooling using a quantum superposition state.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2019-12-31T09:57:03Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.