Abstract

For cold samples of laser-cooled atoms to be useful in emerging technologies such as compact atomic clocks and sensors, it is necessary to achieve small sample sizes while retaining a large number of cold atoms. Achieving large atom numbers in a small system is a major challenge for producing miniaturized laser-cooled atomic clocks, since the number of captured atoms in a vapor-cell magneto-optical trap (MOT) scales as the fourth power of the laser beam diameter [1]. This strong dependence on size is fundamentally set by the maximum spontaneous light force ħkγ/2, where ħk is the photon momentum and γ/2 is the maximum spontaneous photon scatter rate of a saturated transition of linewidth γ. We are attempting to surmount the limit imposed by spontaneous emission by using bichromatic cooling [2] — a technique that uses stimulated emission to slow the atoms. We have built a table-top experiment that uses stimulated-emission bichromatic cooling to pre-cool rubidium atoms and dramatically enhance the trappable atom number in a small MOT. The apparatus lets us test how bichromatic cooling scales with miniaturization. Here we report on our first experimental results of cooling a thermal beam of rubidium atoms down to MOT capture velocities.

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