Search results for "laser"
showing 10 items of 3161 documents
<title>Collisional and thermal ionization of sodium Rydberg atoms in single and crossed atomic beams</title>
2006
The results of the experimental and theoretical study on associative ionization of laser excited Na Rydberg atoms in collisions with ground-state atoms and on thermal ionization by blackbody radiation in single and crossed effusive atomic beams are reported and discussed.
Trapping of laser-vaporized alkali metal atoms in rare-gas matrices
1999
Abstract Alkali metal atoms prepared by laser ablation of solid Li and Na are trapped in Ar, Kr, and Xe matrices and studied by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy (EPR) at 15 K. Evidence for tight trapping sites, not observed for atoms generated by conventional Knudsen oven techniques, is presented. The novel tight trapping sites are characterized by a large increase in the isotropic hyperfine coupling constant and a simultaneous decrease in the isotropic g -value. Based on the EPR data, it is suggested that the observed tight trapping corresponds to single substitution of lattice atoms in Ar, Kr, and Xe matrices.
Optical Fibers Enter a New Space-Time Era
2016
We show experimentally a new type of parametric instability associated with the original phenomenon of beam self-cleaning in multimode fibers. Our experimental results are in good agreement with numerical solutions of the Gross-Pitaevskii equation.
Luminescence center excited state absorption in tungstates
2001
The excited state absorption of intrinsic luminescence center (self-trapped exciton) in tungstates (CaWO4, ZnWO4, PbWO4 and CdWO4) was studied. The transient absorption and luminescence spectra, decay kinetics and lifetime dependencies on temperature have been measured. The model of self-trapped exciton and nature of observed absorption bands were discussed.
Room temperature polariton luminescence from a GaN∕AlGaN quantum well microcavity
2006
The authors report on the demonstration of strong light-matter coupling at room temperature using a crack-free UV microcavity containing GaN/AlGaN quantum wells (QWs). Lattice-matched AlInN/AlGaN distributed Bragg reflectors (DBRs) with a maximum peak reflectivity of 99.5% and SiO2/Si3N4 DBRs were used to form high finesse hybrid microcavities. State-of-the-art GaN/Al0.2Ga0.8N QWs emitting at 3.62 eV with a linewidth of 45 meV at 300 K were inserted in these structures. For a 3 lambda/2 microcavity containing six QWs, the interaction between cavity photons and QW excitons is sufficiently large to reach the strong coupling regime. A polariton luminescence is observed with a vacuum field Rabi…
Extraction dynamics of electrons from magneto-optically trapped atoms
2017
Pulsed photoionization of laser-cooled atoms in a magneto-optical trap (MOT) has the potential to create cold electron beams of few meV bandwidths and few ps pulse lengths. Such a source would be highly attractive for the study of fast low-energy processes like coherent phonon excitation. To study the suitability of MOT-based sources for the production of simultaneously cold and fast electrons, we study the photoionization dynamics of trapped Cs atoms. A momentum-microscope-like setup with a delay-line detector allows for the simultaneous measurement of spatial and temporal electron distributions. The measured patterns are complex, due to the Lorentz force inducing spiral trajectories. Ray-…
Ultracold atoms in optical lattices
2007
This article focuses on the characteristics and properties ultracold atoms in optical lattices.
Formation, Detection and Trapping of Photoassociated Ultracold KRb Molecules
2005
Ultracold ground-state KRb molecules are formed by photoassociation and detected by resonant two-photon ionization. We have assigned both the photoassociation spectrum and the detection laser spectrum, and we have demonstrated magnetic trapping of triplet KRb
Exploring quantum matter with ultracold atoms in optical lattices
2005
Seventy years after Einstein's prediction, the seminal achievement of Bose–Einstein condensation in dilute atomic gases in 1995 has provided us with a new form of quantum matter. Such quantum matter can be described as a single giant matter wave. By loading it into an artificial periodic potential formed by laser light—a so-called optical lattice—it has become possible to probe matter far beyond the wave-like description. In a review of a series of experiments with ultracold quantum gases in optical lattices, we show that the granularity of the matter wave field, caused by the discreteness of atoms, gives rise to effects going beyond the simple single matter wave description. Bose–Einstein …
Laser-induced collective excitations in a two-component Fermi gas
2002
We consider the linear density response of a two-component (superfluid) Fermi gas of atoms when the perturbation is caused by laser light. We show that various types of laser excitation schemes can be transformed into linear density perturbations, however, a Bragg spectroscopy scheme is needed for transferring energy and momentum into a collective mode. This makes other types of laser probing schemes insensitive for collective excitations and therefore well suited for the detection of the superfluid order parameter. We show that for the special case when laser light is coupled between the two components of the Fermi gas, density response is always absent in a homogeneous system.