Bose-Einstein-Condensation
Stefan Kienzle
Technische Universität München
22. Mai 2013
Outline
1 About Bose-Einstein Condensation (BEC)
2 BEC Production
3 Evaporative Cooling
4 Absorption Imaging
5 Interference Between Two Bose Condensates
6 Summary
Outline
1 About Bose-Einstein Condensation (BEC)
2 BEC Production
3 Evaporative Cooling
4 Absorption Imaging
5 Interference Between Two Bose Condensates
6 Summary
History of BEC
I BEC: state of matter in which all atoms occupy lowest
quantum state (ground state)
About Bose-Einstein Condensation (BEC) History of BEC 4 / 28
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History of BEC
I BEC: state of matter in which all atoms occupy lowest
quantum state (ground state)
I S.N. Bose (1924)
quantum statistical treatment of photons
About Bose-Einstein Condensation (BEC) History of BEC 4 / 28
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History of BEC
I BEC: state of matter in which all atoms occupy lowest
quantum state (ground state)
I S.N. Bose (1924)
quantum statistical treatment of photons
I A. Einstein (1924/25)
extended Bose’s idea to material particles
predicted BEC in an ideal quantum gas
About Bose-Einstein Condensation (BEC) History of BEC 4 / 28
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History of BEC
I BEC: state of matter in which all atoms occupy lowest
quantum state (ground state)
I S.N. Bose (1924)
quantum statistical treatment of photons
I A. Einstein (1924/25)
extended Bose’s idea to material particles
predicted BEC in an ideal quantum gas
I W. Ketterle, E. Cornell & C. Wieman (1995)
produced the first gaseous condensate
Nobel Price of Physics (2001)
About Bose-Einstein Condensation (BEC) History of BEC 4 / 28
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What is a BEC
I High temperature T : weak interacting gas
Describe with thermal velocity v , number density n,
distance between atoms d
About Bose-Einstein Condensation (BEC) What is a BEC 5 / 28
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What is a BEC
I High temperature T : weak interacting gas
Describe with thermal velocity v , number density n,
distance between atoms d
I Low temperature T : quantum mechanical description
s
h2
λDB = De-Broglie Wavelength
2πmkB T
with Planck constant h, Boltzmann constant kB and
mass of atoms m
About Bose-Einstein Condensation (BEC) What is a BEC 5 / 28
c Stefan Kienzle
What is a BEC
I High temperature T : weak interacting gas
Describe with thermal velocity v , number density n,
distance between atoms d
I Low temperature T : quantum mechanical description
s
h2
λDB = De-Broglie Wavelength
2πmkB T
with Planck constant h, Boltzmann constant kB and
mass of atoms m
I T = TC : wavepackets start to overlap and form a
BEC
About Bose-Einstein Condensation (BEC) What is a BEC 5 / 28
c Stefan Kienzle
What is a BEC
I High temperature T : weak interacting gas
Describe with thermal velocity v , number density n,
distance between atoms d
I Low temperature T : quantum mechanical description
s
h2
λDB = De-Broglie Wavelength
2πmkB T
with Planck constant h, Boltzmann constant kB and
mass of atoms m
I T = TC : wavepackets start to overlap and form a
BEC
I T = 0 K: pure BEC, described by one single
wavefunction
About Bose-Einstein Condensation (BEC) What is a BEC 5 / 28
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Prerequisites
I Ultracold bosonic gases, Ultra-high vacuum
About Bose-Einstein Condensation (BEC) Prerequisites 6 / 28
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Prerequisites
I Ultracold bosonic gases, Ultra-high vacuum
I Bosons: integer spin
Fermions: half integer spin and governed by
Pauli-Principle
About Bose-Einstein Condensation (BEC) Prerequisites 6 / 28
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Prerequisites
I Ultracold bosonic gases, Ultra-high vacuum
I Bosons: integer spin
Fermions: half integer spin and governed by
Pauli-Principle
I Ultralow temperatures
h2
λDB ≈ d = n−1/3 ⇒ TC (n) = · n2/3
2πmkB
with critical temperature Tc (n)
I.e. TC (n) ≈ 100 nK for dilute gases at densities of
1014 cm−3
About Bose-Einstein Condensation (BEC) Prerequisites 6 / 28
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Prerequisites
I Ultracold bosonic gases, Ultra-high vacuum
I Bosons: integer spin
Fermions: half integer spin and governed by
Pauli-Principle
I Ultralow temperatures
h2
λDB ≈ d = n−1/3 ⇒ TC (n) = · n2/3
2πmkB
with critical temperature Tc (n)
I.e. TC (n) ≈ 100 nK for dilute gases at densities of
1014 cm−3
I Phase-space density D crucial for BEC
D = n · λ3DB D > 2.612
About Bose-Einstein Condensation (BEC) Prerequisites 6 / 28
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BEC Dynamics
I Many-body ground state
ψ(~r , t) = ψ(~r )e −iµt
with ground state energy / chemical potential µ
About Bose-Einstein Condensation (BEC) BEC Dynamics 7 / 28
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BEC Dynamics
I Many-body ground state
ψ(~r , t) = ψ(~r )e −iµt
with ground state energy / chemical potential µ
I Dynamic: Gross-Pitaevski equation
h2
∂
i h ψ(~r , t) = − · ∇2 + U(~r ) + Ũ|ψ(~r , t)|2 ψ(~r , t)
∂t 2m
with harmonic potential U(~r ) = 12 m(ω2x x 2 + ω2y y 2 + ω2z z 2 ) and Ũ = 4πh2 a/m
describing two body collisions
About Bose-Einstein Condensation (BEC) BEC Dynamics 7 / 28
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BEC Dynamics
I Many-body ground state
ψ(~r , t) = ψ(~r )e −iµt
with ground state energy / chemical potential µ
I Dynamic: Gross-Pitaevski equation
h2
∂
i h ψ(~r , t) = − · ∇2 + U(~r ) + Ũ|ψ(~r , t)|2 ψ(~r , t)
∂t 2m
with harmonic potential U(~r ) = 12 m(ω2x x 2 + ω2y y 2 + ω2z z 2 ) and Ũ = 4πh2 a/m
describing two body collisions
I Thomas-Fermi limit (nŨ hωx,y ,z ): neglect term for kinetic energy ⇒ density of
condensate
µ − U(~r )
nc (~r ) = |ψ(~r , t)|2 = max ,0
Ũ
About Bose-Einstein Condensation (BEC) BEC Dynamics 7 / 28
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Outline
1 About Bose-Einstein Condensation (BEC)
2 BEC Production
3 Evaporative Cooling
4 Absorption Imaging
5 Interference Between Two Bose Condensates
6 Summary
Zeeman-Slowing
I reduces velocity & temperature by Laser-cooling
BEC Production Zeeman-Slowing 9 / 28
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Zeeman-Slowing
I reduces velocity & temperature by Laser-cooling
I provides high flux (1012 slow atoms per second) which enables more than 1010 atoms
to be loaded into the MOT in one or two seconds
BEC Production Zeeman-Slowing 9 / 28
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Zeeman-Slowing
I reduces velocity & temperature by Laser-cooling
I provides high flux (1012 slow atoms per second) which enables more than 1010 atoms
to be loaded into the MOT in one or two seconds
I Zeeman-slowed Sodium beam has velocity of 30 m/s corresponding to kinetic energy
of 1 K
BEC Production Zeeman-Slowing 9 / 28
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Magneto-Optical-Trap (MOT)
I S. Chu, C. Cohen-Tannoudji & W. D. Phillips
received the Nobel Prize of Physics for development of methods to
cool and trap atoms with laser light in 1997
BEC Production Magneto-Optical-Trap (MOT) 10 / 28
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Magneto-Optical-Trap (MOT)
I S. Chu, C. Cohen-Tannoudji & W. D. Phillips
received the Nobel Prize of Physics for development of methods to
cool and trap atoms with laser light in 1997
I Cooling in optical molasses
BEC Production Magneto-Optical-Trap (MOT) 10 / 28
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Magneto-Optical-Trap (MOT)
I S. Chu, C. Cohen-Tannoudji & W. D. Phillips
received the Nobel Prize of Physics for development of methods to
cool and trap atoms with laser light in 1997
I Cooling in optical molasses
I Reduces temperature to 1 mK or below
BEC Production Magneto-Optical-Trap (MOT) 10 / 28
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Magneto-Optical-Trap (MOT)
I S. Chu, C. Cohen-Tannoudji & W. D. Phillips
received the Nobel Prize of Physics for development of methods to
cool and trap atoms with laser light in 1997
I Cooling in optical molasses
I Reduces temperature to 1 mK or below
I Zeeman slowed atoms are confined and compressed to higher
densities (1010 - 1012 cm−3 )
BEC Production Magneto-Optical-Trap (MOT) 10 / 28
c Stefan Kienzle
Magneto-Optical-Trap (MOT)
I S. Chu, C. Cohen-Tannoudji & W. D. Phillips
received the Nobel Prize of Physics for development of methods to
cool and trap atoms with laser light in 1997
I Cooling in optical molasses
I Reduces temperature to 1 mK or below
I Zeeman slowed atoms are confined and compressed to higher
densities (1010 - 1012 cm−3 )
I Provides phase-space density D ≈ 10−7 : still too low for phase
transitions
BEC Production Magneto-Optical-Trap (MOT) 10 / 28
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Polarization-Gradient Cooling (Sisyphus-cooling)
I Technique already present in the center of the MOT
BEC Production Polarization-Gradient Cooling (Sisyphus-cooling) 11 / 28
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Polarization-Gradient Cooling (Sisyphus-cooling)
I Technique already present in the center of the MOT
I Colder temperatures reached by switching off the MOT’s magnetic coils and adding
short cycle (few ms) of optimized Polarization-Gradient Cooling
BEC Production Polarization-Gradient Cooling (Sisyphus-cooling) 11 / 28
c Stefan Kienzle
Polarization-Gradient Cooling (Sisyphus-cooling)
I Technique already present in the center of the MOT
I Colder temperatures reached by switching off the MOT’s magnetic coils and adding
short cycle (few ms) of optimized Polarization-Gradient Cooling
I I.e. for sodium temperatures between 50 µK and 100 µK
BEC Production Polarization-Gradient Cooling (Sisyphus-cooling) 11 / 28
c Stefan Kienzle
Polarization-Gradient Cooling (Sisyphus-cooling)
I Technique already present in the center of the MOT
I Colder temperatures reached by switching off the MOT’s magnetic coils and adding
short cycle (few ms) of optimized Polarization-Gradient Cooling
I I.e. for sodium temperatures between 50 µK and 100 µK
I Provides phase-space density D ≈ 10−6 : still too low for phase transitions
BEC Production Polarization-Gradient Cooling (Sisyphus-cooling) 11 / 28
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Magnetic Trapping
I Magnetic Trapping of neutral atoms first observed in 1985
BEC Production Magnetic Trapping 12 / 28
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Magnetic Trapping
I Magnetic Trapping of neutral atoms first observed in 1985
I Major role: Accomodate pre-cooled atoms and compress them ⇒ high collision rates
and evaporative cooling
BEC Production Magnetic Trapping 12 / 28
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Magnetic Trapping
I Magnetic Trapping of neutral atoms first observed in 1985
I Major role: Accomodate pre-cooled atoms and compress them ⇒ high collision rates
and evaporative cooling
I Atoms trapped by interactions of magnetic dipole with external magnetic field
Energy levels in a magnetic field E (mF ) = g µB mF B
BEC Production Magnetic Trapping 12 / 28
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Magnetic Trapping
I Magnetic Trapping of neutral atoms first observed in 1985
I Major role: Accomodate pre-cooled atoms and compress them ⇒ high collision rates
and evaporative cooling
I Atoms trapped by interactions of magnetic dipole with external magnetic field
Energy levels in a magnetic field E (mF ) = g µB mF B
I Maxwell ⇒ only confines weak-field seeker
BEC Production Magnetic Trapping 12 / 28
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Magnetic Trapping
I Magnetic Trapping of neutral atoms first observed in 1985
I Major role: Accomodate pre-cooled atoms and compress them ⇒ high collision rates
and evaporative cooling
I Atoms trapped by interactions of magnetic dipole with external magnetic field
Energy levels in a magnetic field E (mF ) = g µB mF B
I Maxwell ⇒ only confines weak-field seeker
I Excellent tool for evaporative cooling
BEC Production Magnetic Trapping 12 / 28
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Outline
1 About Bose-Einstein Condensation (BEC)
2 BEC Production
3 Evaporative Cooling
4 Absorption Imaging
5 Interference Between Two Bose Condensates
6 Summary
Concepts and History
I Continously removing trapped high-energy atoms to
reach TC
Evaporative Cooling Concepts and History 14 / 28
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Concepts and History
I Continously removing trapped high-energy atoms to
reach TC
I Evaporated atoms carry away more than average
energy ⇒ temperature decreases
Evaporative Cooling Concepts and History 14 / 28
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Concepts and History
I Continously removing trapped high-energy atoms to
reach TC
I Evaporated atoms carry away more than average
energy ⇒ temperature decreases
I Suggested by H. Hess in 1985 with trapped atomic
hydrogen
Evaporative Cooling Concepts and History 14 / 28
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Concepts and History
I Continously removing trapped high-energy atoms to
reach TC
I Evaporated atoms carry away more than average
energy ⇒ temperature decreases
I Suggested by H. Hess in 1985 with trapped atomic
hydrogen
I Technique was extended to alkali atoms in 1994 by
combining Evaporative Cooling with Laser Cooling
Evaporative Cooling Concepts and History 14 / 28
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RF Induced Evaporation
RF-Field
Distance to
trap center
I Radio frequented (RF) radiation flips atomic spin ⇒ attractive trapping force turns
into repulsive force and expels atoms from trap
Evaporative Cooling RF Induced Evaporation 15 / 28
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RF Induced Evaporation
RF-Field
Distance to
trap center
I Radio frequented (RF) radiation flips atomic spin ⇒ attractive trapping force turns
into repulsive force and expels atoms from trap
I Energy selective ⇒ only atoms with E > h|mF |(ωRF − ω0 )
with rf frequenzy ω0 which induces spinflips at the bottom of the trap
Evaporative Cooling RF Induced Evaporation 15 / 28
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RF Induced Evaporation
RF-Field
Distance to
trap center
I Radio frequented (RF) radiation flips atomic spin ⇒ attractive trapping force turns
into repulsive force and expels atoms from trap
I Energy selective ⇒ only atoms with E > h|mF |(ωRF − ω0 )
with rf frequenzy ω0 which induces spinflips at the bottom of the trap
I Other atoms rethermalyze
Evaporative Cooling RF Induced Evaporation 15 / 28
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RF Induced Evaporation
RF-Field
Distance to
trap center
I Radio frequented (RF) radiation flips atomic spin ⇒ attractive trapping force turns
into repulsive force and expels atoms from trap
I Energy selective ⇒ only atoms with E > h|mF |(ωRF − ω0 )
with rf frequenzy ω0 which induces spinflips at the bottom of the trap
I Other atoms rethermalyze
I Advantage: No need to weaken trapping potential in order to lower depth.
Atoms evaporate from whole surface where RF resonance condition is fullfilled ⇒ 3D
in velocity space
Evaporative Cooling RF Induced Evaporation 15 / 28
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RF Induced Evaporation
I Rethermalization: Scattering processes lead to new distribution
Evaporative Cooling RF Induced Evaporation 16 / 28
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RF Induced Evaporation
I Rethermalization: Scattering processes lead to new distribution
I Favorable ratio between elastic collision rate (provides Evaporative Cooling) and
inelastic collision rate (leads to trap loss and heating) required
Evaporative Cooling RF Induced Evaporation 16 / 28
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RF Induced Evaporation
I Rethermalization: Scattering processes lead to new distribution
I Favorable ratio between elastic collision rate (provides Evaporative Cooling) and
inelastic collision rate (leads to trap loss and heating) required
I Provides phase-space density D > 2.612
Evaporative Cooling RF Induced Evaporation 16 / 28
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RF Induced Evaporation
I Horizontal sections taken through center of velocity
distribution
Evaporative Cooling RF Induced Evaporation 17 / 28
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RF Induced Evaporation
I Horizontal sections taken through center of velocity
distribution
I Lower values show appearance of condensate fraction
Evaporative Cooling RF Induced Evaporation 17 / 28
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RF Induced Evaporation
I Horizontal sections taken through center of velocity
distribution
I Lower values show appearance of condensate fraction
I Above 4.23 MHz: single Gaussian-like distribution
Evaporative Cooling RF Induced Evaporation 17 / 28
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RF Induced Evaporation
I Horizontal sections taken through center of velocity
distribution
I Lower values show appearance of condensate fraction
I Above 4.23 MHz: single Gaussian-like distribution
I At 4.23 MHz: sharp central peak appears
Evaporative Cooling RF Induced Evaporation 17 / 28
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RF Induced Evaporation
I Horizontal sections taken through center of velocity
distribution
I Lower values show appearance of condensate fraction
I Above 4.23 MHz: single Gaussian-like distribution
I At 4.23 MHz: sharp central peak appears
I Below 4.23 MHz: broad curve & narrow central peak; the
noncondensate & condensate fraction
Evaporative Cooling RF Induced Evaporation 17 / 28
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RF Induced Evaporation
I Horizontal sections taken through center of velocity
distribution
I Lower values show appearance of condensate fraction
I Above 4.23 MHz: single Gaussian-like distribution
I At 4.23 MHz: sharp central peak appears
I Below 4.23 MHz: broad curve & narrow central peak; the
noncondensate & condensate fraction
I At 4.1 MHz: just little remains of noncondensate fraction
Evaporative Cooling RF Induced Evaporation 17 / 28
c Stefan Kienzle
Outline
1 About Bose-Einstein Condensation (BEC)
2 BEC Production
3 Evaporative Cooling
4 Absorption Imaging
5 Interference Between Two Bose Condensates
6 Summary
Absorption Imaging
I Switching off trap ⇒ condensate falling down (gravity) and ballistically expands
Absorption Imaging Absorption Imaging 19 / 28
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Absorption Imaging
I Switching off trap ⇒ condensate falling down (gravity) and ballistically expands
I Illuminating atoms with nearly resonant laser beam and imaging shadow cast on
charge-coupled device camera (CCD-camera)
Absorption Imaging Absorption Imaging 19 / 28
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Absorption Imaging
I Switching off trap ⇒ condensate falling down (gravity) and ballistically expands
I Illuminating atoms with nearly resonant laser beam and imaging shadow cast on
charge-coupled device camera (CCD-camera)
I Cloud heats up by absorbing photons (about one recoil energy per photon)
Absorption Imaging Absorption Imaging 19 / 28
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Absorption Imaging
I Switching off trap ⇒ condensate falling down (gravity) and ballistically expands
I Illuminating atoms with nearly resonant laser beam and imaging shadow cast on
charge-coupled device camera (CCD-camera)
I Cloud heats up by absorbing photons (about one recoil energy per photon)
I Single destructive image
Absorption Imaging Absorption Imaging 19 / 28
c Stefan Kienzle
Absorption Imaging
I Switching off trap ⇒ condensate falling down (gravity) and ballistically expands
I Illuminating atoms with nearly resonant laser beam and imaging shadow cast on
charge-coupled device camera (CCD-camera)
I Cloud heats up by absorbing photons (about one recoil energy per photon)
I Single destructive image
I Provides reliable density distributions of which properties of condensates and
thermal clouds can be inferred
Absorption Imaging Absorption Imaging 19 / 28
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Absorption Imaging
I 2D probe absorption images after 6 ms time of flight
Width of images is 870 µm
Absorption Imaging Absorption Imaging 20 / 28
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Absorption Imaging
I 2D probe absorption images after 6 ms time of flight
Width of images is 870 µm
I Velocity distribution of cloud just above transition point
Absorption Imaging Absorption Imaging 20 / 28
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Absorption Imaging
I 2D probe absorption images after 6 ms time of flight
Width of images is 870 µm
I Velocity distribution of cloud just above transition point
I Shows difference between isotropic thermal distribution and elliptical core attributed
to expansion of dense condensate
Absorption Imaging Absorption Imaging 20 / 28
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Absorption Imaging
I 2D probe absorption images after 6 ms time of flight
Width of images is 870 µm
I Velocity distribution of cloud just above transition point
I Shows difference between isotropic thermal distribution and elliptical core attributed
to expansion of dense condensate
I Almost pure condensate (after further evaporative cooling)
Absorption Imaging Absorption Imaging 20 / 28
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Absorption Imaging
87
I Produced in vapor of Rb atoms
Absorption Imaging Absorption Imaging 21 / 28
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Absorption Imaging
87
I Produced in vapor of Rb atoms
I Fraction of condensed atoms first appear near T =170 nK & n = 2.5 · 1012 cm−3
Could be preserved for more than 15 seconds
Absorption Imaging Absorption Imaging 21 / 28
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Absorption Imaging
87
I Produced in vapor of Rb atoms
I Fraction of condensed atoms first appear near T =170 nK & n = 2.5 · 1012 cm−3
Could be preserved for more than 15 seconds
I BEC on top of broad thermal velocity
Absorption Imaging Absorption Imaging 21 / 28
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Absorption Imaging
87
I Produced in vapor of Rb atoms
I Fraction of condensed atoms first appear near T =170 nK & n = 2.5 · 1012 cm−3
Could be preserved for more than 15 seconds
I BEC on top of broad thermal velocity
I Fraction of atoms that were in this low-velocity peak increases abruptly
Absorption Imaging Absorption Imaging 21 / 28
c Stefan Kienzle
Absorption Imaging
87
I Produced in vapor of Rb atoms
I Fraction of condensed atoms first appear near T =170 nK & n = 2.5 · 1012 cm−3
Could be preserved for more than 15 seconds
I BEC on top of broad thermal velocity
I Fraction of atoms that were in this low-velocity peak increases abruptly
I Nonthermal, anisotropic velocity distribution expected of minimum-energy quantum
state of magnetic trap
Absorption Imaging Absorption Imaging 21 / 28
c Stefan Kienzle
Outline
1 About Bose-Einstein Condensation (BEC)
2 BEC Production
3 Evaporative Cooling
4 Absorption Imaging
5 Interference Between Two Bose Condensates
6 Summary
Interference
I Evidence for coherence of BEC’s
Interference Between Two Bose Condensates Interference Between Two Bose Condensates 23 / 28
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Interference
I Evidence for coherence of BEC’s
I Cut atom trap in half (double-well potential) by
focusing far-off-resonant laser light into center of
magnetic trap
Interference Between Two Bose Condensates Interference Between Two Bose Condensates 23 / 28
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Interference
I Evidence for coherence of BEC’s
I Cut atom trap in half (double-well potential) by
focusing far-off-resonant laser light into center of
magnetic trap
I Cool atoms in these two halves to form two
independent condensates
Interference Between Two Bose Condensates Interference Between Two Bose Condensates 23 / 28
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Interference
I Evidence for coherence of BEC’s
I Cut atom trap in half (double-well potential) by
focusing far-off-resonant laser light into center of
magnetic trap
I Cool atoms in these two halves to form two
independent condensates
I Quickly turn off laser and magnetic fields, allowing
atoms to fall and expand freely
Interference Between Two Bose Condensates Interference Between Two Bose Condensates 23 / 28
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Interference
I Evidence for coherence of BEC’s
I Cut atom trap in half (double-well potential) by
focusing far-off-resonant laser light into center of
magnetic trap
I Cool atoms in these two halves to form two
independent condensates
I Quickly turn off laser and magnetic fields, allowing
atoms to fall and expand freely
I Both condensates start to overlap and interfere with
each other
Interference Between Two Bose Condensates Interference Between Two Bose Condensates 23 / 28
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Interference
I Interference pattern of two expanding condensates after 40 ms time of flight for 2
different powers of Argon-ion laser light (3 & 5 mW)
Interference Between Two Bose Condensates Interference Between Two Bose Condensates 24 / 28
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Interference
I Interference pattern of two expanding condensates after 40 ms time of flight for 2
different powers of Argon-ion laser light (3 & 5 mW)
I Fringe periods 20 & 15 µm
Interference Between Two Bose Condensates Interference Between Two Bose Condensates 24 / 28
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Interference
I Interference pattern of two expanding condensates after 40 ms time of flight for 2
different powers of Argon-ion laser light (3 & 5 mW)
I Fringe periods 20 & 15 µm
I Fields of view: horizontally: 1.1 mm
vertically: 0.5 mm
Interference Between Two Bose Condensates Interference Between Two Bose Condensates 24 / 28
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Interference Drop Tower
I Recent experiment: drop tower (Center of Applied Space
Technology and Microgravity ’ZARM’ Bremen)
Interference Between Two Bose Condensates Interference Between Two Bose Condensates 25 / 28
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Interference Drop Tower
I Recent experiment: drop tower (Center of Applied Space
Technology and Microgravity ’ZARM’ Bremen)
I Height: 146 m (outside); 120 m (inside)
Delivers 4.74 s of near weightlessness
Interference Between Two Bose Condensates Interference Between Two Bose Condensates 25 / 28
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Interference Drop Tower
I Recent experiment: drop tower (Center of Applied Space
Technology and Microgravity ’ZARM’ Bremen)
I Height: 146 m (outside); 120 m (inside)
Delivers 4.74 s of near weightlessness
I Capturing cold atoms in magneto-optical trap (MOT)
Interference Between Two Bose Condensates Interference Between Two Bose Condensates 25 / 28
c Stefan Kienzle
Interference Drop Tower
I Recent experiment: drop tower (Center of Applied Space
Technology and Microgravity ’ZARM’ Bremen)
I Height: 146 m (outside); 120 m (inside)
Delivers 4.74 s of near weightlessness
I Capturing cold atoms in magneto-optical trap (MOT)
I Loading Ioffe-Pritchard trap, creating BEC consisting of
104 87 Rb atoms
Interference Between Two Bose Condensates Interference Between Two Bose Condensates 25 / 28
c Stefan Kienzle
Interference Drop Tower
I Evolution of BEC and asymmetric Mach-Zehnder interferometer (AMZI) visualized
by series of absorption images of atomic densities separated by 1 ms
Interference Between Two Bose Condensates Interference Between Two Bose Condensates 26 / 28
c Stefan Kienzle
Interference Drop Tower
I Evolution of BEC and asymmetric Mach-Zehnder interferometer (AMZI) visualized
by series of absorption images of atomic densities separated by 1 ms
I Interferometer starts at time t0 after release of BEC
Interference Between Two Bose Condensates Interference Between Two Bose Condensates 26 / 28
c Stefan Kienzle
Interference Drop Tower
I Evolution of BEC and asymmetric Mach-Zehnder interferometer (AMZI) visualized
by series of absorption images of atomic densities separated by 1 ms
I Interferometer starts at time t0 after release of BEC
I Two counter-propagating light beams of frequencies ω and ω + δ creates coherent
superposition of two wave packets that drift apart, redirects and partially recombines
them
Interference Between Two Bose Condensates Interference Between Two Bose Condensates 26 / 28
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Summary
I BEC is a state of matter in which all atoms occupy the ground state
Summary 27 / 28
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Summary
I BEC is a state of matter in which all atoms occupy the ground state
I Phase transistions for D > 2.612
Summary 27 / 28
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Summary
I BEC is a state of matter in which all atoms occupy the ground state
I Phase transistions for D > 2.612
I Condensate has anisotropic density distribution
Summary 27 / 28
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Summary
I BEC is a state of matter in which all atoms occupy the ground state
I Phase transistions for D > 2.612
I Condensate has anisotropic density distribution
I Interference between two condensates is evidence for coherence of BEC’s
Summary 27 / 28
c Stefan Kienzle
References
M.R. Andrews, C.G. Townsend, H.-J. Miesner, D.S. Durfee, D.M. Kurn, W.
Ketterle: Science 275, 637-641 (1997)
http://www.sciencemag.org/content/275/5300/637.abstract
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