6533b81ffe1ef96bd1279077
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Experimental realization of fast ion separation in segmented Paul traps
T. RusterClaudia WarschburgerAndreas Daniel PfisterChristian Tomás SchmiegelowAndreas WaltherFerdinand Schmidt-kalerVidyut KaushalH. KaufmannUlrich PoschingerM. Hettrichsubject
PhysicsQuantum PhysicsAtomic Physics (physics.atom-ph)FOS: Physical sciencesIon trappingAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsPhysics - Atomic PhysicsIonNuclear magnetic resonanceCritical point (thermodynamics)Excited stateThermalIon trapAtomic physicsQuantum Physics (quant-ph)Adiabatic processExcitationdescription
We experimentally demonstrate fast separation of a two-ion crystal in a microstructured segmented Paul trap. By the use of spectroscopic calibration routines for the electrostatic trap potentials, we achieve the required precise control of the ion trajectories near the critical point, where the harmonic confinement by the external potential vanishes. The separation procedure can be controlled by three parameters: a static potential tilt, a voltage offset at the critical point, and the total duration of the process. We show how to optimize the control parameters by measurements of ion distances, trap frequencies, and the final motional excitation. We extend the standard measurement technique for motional excitation to allow for discriminating thermal and oscillatory states, and to cover a dynamic range covering more than 4 orders of magnitude in energy. It is shown that for fast separation times, oscillatory motion is excited, while a predominantly thermal state is obtained for long times. At a separation duration of $80\phantom{\rule{0.222222em}{0ex}}\phantom{\rule{4pt}{0ex}}\ensuremath{\mu}\mathrm{s}$, a minimum mean excitation of $\overline{n}=4.16(0.16)$ vibrational quanta per ion is achieved, which is consistent with the adiabatic limit given by our particular trap. The presented technique does not rely on specific trap geometry parameters and can therefore be adopted for different segmented traps.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2014-05-20 | Physical Review A |