CUPC Oct 14, 2015

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Modelling Magnetic Fields of MicroTrap Arrays for Trapping Ultracold Atoms A. Mouraviev, & W. A. van Wijngaarden Physics Dept., York University www.wvanwijngaarden.info.yorku.ca CUPC 2015

Transcript of CUPC Oct 14, 2015

Page 1: CUPC Oct 14, 2015

Modelling Magnetic Fields of MicroTrap

Arrays for Trapping Ultracold Atoms

A. Mouraviev, & W. A. van Wijngaarden

Physics Dept., York University

www.wvanwijngaarden.info.yorku.ca

CUPC 2015

Presenter
Presentation Notes
My work this summer was on modeling magnetic fields of magnetic micro traps for trapping atoms
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Ultracold Atoms W.A. van Wijngaarden & B. Lu. Phys. in Can. 60, No. 5 (2004)

Why Study Ultracold Atoms? - Near absolute zero, weird effects such as superfluidity &

superconductivity occur. (D & J Tilley, Superfluidity & Superconductivity, U. Sussex Press, 1986)

How Do You Get Bose Einstein Condensation (BEC)?

- Bosons condense into lowest state at ultralow temperatures (K. Stowe, Intro. Stat. Mech. & Thermo., J. Wiley, Toronto, 1984)

- Macroscopic effects of quantum mechanics evident when de Broglie wavelength λB ~ distance between atoms

h = Planck’s constant M = atom’s mass kB = Boltzmann’s constant

Presenter
Presentation Notes
Some of my supervisor's work is on Ultra Cold atoms and BEC BEC -> Bosons not subject to pauli exclusion principle Macroscopic: Superfluidity – > Zero Viscosity , vortices that never stop rotating ; Superconductivity -> Zero Resistance Debroglie wavelength
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t = 6 ms t = 12 t = 10

t = 14 t = 20 t = 18 t = 16

t = 8

Measurement of Ultracold Temperature

Observe expansion of atom cloud after trap turned off.

Presenter
Presentation Notes
Release from trap
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How does an Atom Trap Work?

Zeeman Hamiltonian

Zeeman Shift of 87Rb F=2 Hyperfine level

µ = atom’s magnetic moment B = magnetic field

1

-2

0

mF = 2

-1

B 5S1/2 F=2

Atoms in mF = 1, 2 hyperfine levels trapped at minimum magnetic field.

Presenter
Presentation Notes
I – nuclear spin J – electronic angular momentum F = 1 and 2, ground state hyperfine levels \
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Double Loop Microtrap B. Jian & WvW, JOSA B 30, No. 2, 238 (2013)

Current I2 = -1.23 I1 Radius R2 = 1.4 R1 B0 = I1/R1

x

z

-y

R1

R2 I2

zm

Presenter
Presentation Notes
Zeeman shift diagram -> put earlier when explaining how atom trap works Explain f and angular momentum. Have an example for Rb -> energy levels
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Microtrap Array B. Jian & W. A. van Wijngaarden, J. Phys. B 47, 215301 (2014)

Cu Block Heatsink

2 cm

3 mm

Presenter
Presentation Notes
In the limit of slow atomic motion -bigger
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Magnetic Field Calculation using Mathematica

-y S

x

z I

H

Consider loop in yz plane having radius R & current I. I>0 generates field in + x direction.

Presenter
Presentation Notes
Include a single coil
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i. Atom Transfer between Microtraps • Atom transferred from double-

loop microtrap A centered at x = 0 to double-loop microtrap B centered at x = R1/2.

• Current IA (IB) linearly decreased (increased) from t = 0 to t = 1.

• Trap profile remains virtually constant throughout transfer.

-3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 x / R1

2

1.5 1

0.5 0

|B|/B0

t = 0.75

t = 0

t = 1

t = 0.5

t = 0.25

x

z

-y

R1

R2

IA

z

Presenter
Presentation Notes
Trap profile remains virtually constant throughout transfer, important for minimizing atom loss
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ii. Addition of Ioffe Coil

2

1.5 1

0.5

0.0

|B| / B0

IIC

x

z

-y

R1

R2 IIC = 9 I1

-1 -0.5 0 0.5 1 x / R1

z / R

1

IIC = 0

z / R

1

1.0

0.8

0.6

0.4

0.2

0.0

Generate trap having nonzero minimum field to prevent spin flips using Ioffe Coil having radius RIC = R1/8 centered at (1.4, 0, 0.15) R1.

-1 -0.5 0 0.5 1 x / R1

1.0

0.8

0.6

0.4

0.2

0.0

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1.5 1

0.5

0.0 0 0.5 1 1.5 z / R1

-1 -0.5 0 0.5 1 x / R1

3 2 1 0

Bmin = 0.104 Bo at (0.48, 0, 0.47) R1

-1 -0.5 0 0.5 1 x / R1

z / R

1

1.0

0.8

0.6

0.4

0.2

0.0

2

1.5 1

0.5

0.0

|B|/B0

Trap Potential due to Ioffe Coil

Trap depth = 0.48 B0

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Bias Field Effect on Trap Position & Depth

x

z

-y

R1

R2 xC

Bzbias

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

-0.75 -0.5 -0.25 0 0.25 0.5 0.75

Trap

Dep

th /

Bo

Mic

rotr

ap z

Pos

iton

/ R1

Bzbias / Bo

Presenter
Presentation Notes
-reduce number of ticks in y axis
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Conclusions • Microtraps use much smaller currents than macroscopic traps

• Double-loop microtraps useful to create one or two dimensional arrays of ultracold atoms. Current can be adjusted or bias field varied to modify trap position & depth – useful for surface studies.

• Modelled how to transfer atoms between two adjacent double loop microtraps. Trap profile remains constant during transfer minimizing atom loss.

• Trap having nonzero magnetic field minimum generated by adding small Ioffe coil, partially embedded in atom chip, useful to prevent atom loss due to spin flips.

Applications: Precision Measurements, Frequency Standards, Surface Sensing, Atom Interferometry, Quantum Information Processing etc.

Additional Information: www.wvanwijngaarden.info.yorku.ca

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Laser Cooling H. Metcalf & P. v. d. Straten, Laser Cooling & Trapping (Springer,1999)

Analogous to stopping transport truck on highway (atom) by bouncing beam of ping pong balls (photons) off it.

10-2

10-6

10-4

100

102

104

Kel

vins

Mass M

Velocity v h / λPhoton Momentum

h = Planck’s constant

# photons to stop thermal 87Rb atom = M v / (h / λ) = 50,000 photons

Stopping Time T = 50,000 x τ excited state lifetime = 1.4 msec

Stopping Distance = v τ / 2 = 20 cm

Laser Power to stop 109 atoms/sec = 109 x 50,000 h ν / T ≈ 10 mW

Doppler cooling limit = h Γ transition linewidth /2 k ≈ 100 µK

Analogous to stopping transport truck on highway (atom) by bouncing beam of ping pong balls (photons) off it.

10-2

10-6

10-4

100

102

104

Kel

vins

10-2

10-6

10-4

100

102

104

Kel

vins

Mass M

Velocity v h / λPhoton Momentum

h = Planck’s constant

# photons to stop thermal 87Rb atom = M v / (h / λ) = 50,000 photons

Stopping Time T = 50,000 x τ excited state lifetime = 1.4 msec

Stopping Distance = v τ / 2 = 20 cm

Laser Power to stop 109 atoms/sec = 109 x 50,000 h ν / T ≈ 10 mW

Doppler cooling limit = h Γ transition linewidth /2 k ≈ 100 µK

Page 14: CUPC Oct 14, 2015