Abstract

We have evaporatively cooled caesium atoms in a magnetic trap to temperatures as low as 8 nK and produced a final phase space density within a factor of four of that required for the onset of Bose–Einstein condensation. At the end of the forced radio-frequency evaporation, 1500 atoms in the F = 3, mF = −3 state remain in the magnetic trap. We observe a decrease in the one-dimensional evaporative cooling efficiency at very low temperatures as the trapped sample enters the collisionally thick (hydrodynamic) regime. To alleviate this problem we propose a modified trapping scheme where three-dimensional evaporation is possible. In addition, we report measurements of the two-body inelastic collision rates for caesium atoms as a function of magnetic field. We confirm the positions, with reduced uncertainties, of three previously identified resonances at magnetic fields of 108.87(6), 118.46(3) and 133.52(3) G.

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