Trapping and evaporation of strontium-87 and strontium-88 mixtures

This thesis describes trapping and evaporative cooling of ultracold 87Sr and 88Sr mixtures in an optical dipole trap to produce the first Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) of 88Sr. Furthermore, this work presents thermalization studies that characterize the scattering properties of these ultracold str...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Killian, Thomas C.
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1911/62095
id ndltd-RICE-oai-scholarship.rice.edu-1911-62095
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-RICE-oai-scholarship.rice.edu-1911-620952013-05-01T03:46:46ZTrapping and evaporation of strontium-87 and strontium-88 mixturesPhysicsLow TemperaturePhysicsCondensed MatterPhysicsAtomicThis thesis describes trapping and evaporative cooling of ultracold 87Sr and 88Sr mixtures in an optical dipole trap to produce the first Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) of 88Sr. Furthermore, this work presents thermalization studies that characterize the scattering properties of these ultracold strontium samples. Such ultracold atomic gases have become an important area of research because of their potential for improving optical frequency standards and for realizing quantum computation using neutral atoms. A BEC of 88Sr is particularly interesting because the small value of its background s-wave scattering length may enable the use of optical Feshbach resonances to create two-dimensional solitons. However, the small scattering length for 88Sr also hinders efficient evaporative cooling in the optical dipole trap, a necessary step to producing a BEC. Experiments with other ultracold gases have successfully overcome this hurdle by mixing in a second atomic species which, by introducing stronger interactions with the weakly interacting species, enables evaporation to colder temperatures via sympathetic cooling. For this work, we use 87Sr to sympathetically cool 88Sr during forced evaporation to quantum degeneracy. Previous experiments in the Killian Lab characterized 88Sr in detail. Here, I emphasize the new or improved aspects that have allowed trapping and cooling of the mixtures of 87Sr and 88 Sr: trapping of 87Sr by itself, spectroscopic measurements of all the stable strontium isotopes to guide the trapping of isotopic mixtures, imaging of both 87Sr and 88Sr, and the various trade-offs necessary to simultaneously trap 87Sr and 88Sr. Finally, I discuss how the thermalization studies of the scattering properties of the isotopes guide the forced evaporation of mixed isotope samples. These efforts result in the production of the BEC of 88Sr, but they also point the way to future studies of fermionic quantum degeneracy in 87Sr and to the rich physics of mixed species ultracold atomic systems.Killian, Thomas C.2011-07-25T02:06:14Z2011-07-25T02:06:14Z2010ThesisTextapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1911/62095eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Physics
Low Temperature
Physics
Condensed Matter
Physics
Atomic
spellingShingle Physics
Low Temperature
Physics
Condensed Matter
Physics
Atomic
Trapping and evaporation of strontium-87 and strontium-88 mixtures
description This thesis describes trapping and evaporative cooling of ultracold 87Sr and 88Sr mixtures in an optical dipole trap to produce the first Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) of 88Sr. Furthermore, this work presents thermalization studies that characterize the scattering properties of these ultracold strontium samples. Such ultracold atomic gases have become an important area of research because of their potential for improving optical frequency standards and for realizing quantum computation using neutral atoms. A BEC of 88Sr is particularly interesting because the small value of its background s-wave scattering length may enable the use of optical Feshbach resonances to create two-dimensional solitons. However, the small scattering length for 88Sr also hinders efficient evaporative cooling in the optical dipole trap, a necessary step to producing a BEC. Experiments with other ultracold gases have successfully overcome this hurdle by mixing in a second atomic species which, by introducing stronger interactions with the weakly interacting species, enables evaporation to colder temperatures via sympathetic cooling. For this work, we use 87Sr to sympathetically cool 88Sr during forced evaporation to quantum degeneracy. Previous experiments in the Killian Lab characterized 88Sr in detail. Here, I emphasize the new or improved aspects that have allowed trapping and cooling of the mixtures of 87Sr and 88 Sr: trapping of 87Sr by itself, spectroscopic measurements of all the stable strontium isotopes to guide the trapping of isotopic mixtures, imaging of both 87Sr and 88Sr, and the various trade-offs necessary to simultaneously trap 87Sr and 88Sr. Finally, I discuss how the thermalization studies of the scattering properties of the isotopes guide the forced evaporation of mixed isotope samples. These efforts result in the production of the BEC of 88Sr, but they also point the way to future studies of fermionic quantum degeneracy in 87Sr and to the rich physics of mixed species ultracold atomic systems.
author2 Killian, Thomas C.
author_facet Killian, Thomas C.
title Trapping and evaporation of strontium-87 and strontium-88 mixtures
title_short Trapping and evaporation of strontium-87 and strontium-88 mixtures
title_full Trapping and evaporation of strontium-87 and strontium-88 mixtures
title_fullStr Trapping and evaporation of strontium-87 and strontium-88 mixtures
title_full_unstemmed Trapping and evaporation of strontium-87 and strontium-88 mixtures
title_sort trapping and evaporation of strontium-87 and strontium-88 mixtures
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/1911/62095
_version_ 1716584868526161920