Difference between revisions of "Optical Loading of Magnetic Traps"
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− | + | [[File:Apparatus_for_Magnetically_Trapping_CaH.png|thumb|500px|A buffer gas cooled beam of CaH will be separated from helium buffer gas before being optically loaded into a magnetic trap.]] | |
We realize a continuous, high flux, cold molecular or atomic beam using buffer gas cooling techniques. Recent efforts have focused on creating such a source by mixing hot vapor (up to 600K) with cold neon buffer gas (15K) before emitting the mixture in a high flux beam. Neon buffer gas produces a beam with a forward velocity distribution and low energy tail comparable to much colder helium based beams. Such a beam may be a good starting point for laser cooling, cold collision studies, and trapping . Recent efforts have focused on magnetic trapping of potassium, but previous work realized cold beams of molecular oxygen and deuterated ammonia molecules. | We realize a continuous, high flux, cold molecular or atomic beam using buffer gas cooling techniques. Recent efforts have focused on creating such a source by mixing hot vapor (up to 600K) with cold neon buffer gas (15K) before emitting the mixture in a high flux beam. Neon buffer gas produces a beam with a forward velocity distribution and low energy tail comparable to much colder helium based beams. Such a beam may be a good starting point for laser cooling, cold collision studies, and trapping . Recent efforts have focused on magnetic trapping of potassium, but previous work realized cold beams of molecular oxygen and deuterated ammonia molecules. | ||
Revision as of 08:57, 9 November 2010
Contents
Cold Beam
People
Post Docs
- Matthew Wright
Grad Students
- Hsin-I Lu
- Julia Rasmussen
Overview
We realize a continuous, high flux, cold molecular or atomic beam using buffer gas cooling techniques. Recent efforts have focused on creating such a source by mixing hot vapor (up to 600K) with cold neon buffer gas (15K) before emitting the mixture in a high flux beam. Neon buffer gas produces a beam with a forward velocity distribution and low energy tail comparable to much colder helium based beams. Such a beam may be a good starting point for laser cooling, cold collision studies, and trapping . Recent efforts have focused on magnetic trapping of potassium, but previous work realized cold beams of molecular oxygen and deuterated ammonia molecules.
Recent Publications
- Intense atomic and molecular beams via neon buffer-gas cooling, D. Patterson, J. Rasmussen, and J.M. Doyle. New Journal of Physics 11, 055018 (2009).
- Bright, Guided Molecular Beam with Hydrodynamic Enhancement, D. Patterson and J.M. Doyle. J of Chem Phys 126, 154307 (2007).