Optical Dipole Traps for Neutral Atoms
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TL;DR: In this article, optical dipole traps for neutral atoms have been used for storage and trapping of charged and neutral atoms in the vast energy range from elementary particles to ultracold atomic quantum matter.
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Abstract: Publisher Summary This chapter discusses optical dipole traps for neutral atoms Methods for storage and trapping of charged and neutral particles have very often served as the experimental key to great scientific advances, covering physics in the vast energy range from elementary particles to ultracold atomic quantum matter It describes the basic physics of dipole trapping in fardetuned light, the typical experimental techniques and procedures, and the different trap types currently available, along with their specific features In the experiments discussed, optical dipole traps have already shown great promise for a variety of different applications Of particular importance is the trapping of atoms in the absolute internal ground state, which cannot be trapped magnetically In this state, inelastic binary collisions are completely suppressed for energetic reasons In this respect, an ultracold cesium gas represents a particularly interesting situation, because Bose–Einstein condensation seems attainable only for the absolute ground state Therefore, an optical trap may be the only way to realize a quantum-degenerate gas of Cs atoms Further, optical dipole traps can be seen as storage devices at the low end of the presently explorable energy scale Future experiments exploiting the particular advantages of these traps can reveal interesting new phenomena
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TL;DR: A Bose-Einstein condensate was produced in a vapor of rubidium-87 atoms that was confined by magnetic fields and evaporatively cooled and exhibited a nonthermal, anisotropic velocity distribution expected of the minimum-energy quantum state of the magnetic trap in contrast to the isotropic, thermal velocity distribution observed in the broad uncondensed fraction.
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Evidence of Bose-Einstein Condensation in an Atomic Gas with Attractive Interactions
TL;DR: Evidence for Bose-Einstein condensation of a gas of spin-polarized {sup 7}Li atoms is reported, and phase-space densities consistent with quantum degeneracy are measured for temperatures in the range of 100 to 400 nK.
Optical Resonance and Two-level Atoms
TL;DR: In this paper, optical resonance and two-level atoms have been studied in terms of two level atoms, and two level atoms have been shown to have similar properties to two-layer atoms.
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