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      Long range transport of ultra cold atoms in a far-detuned 1D optical lattice

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          Abstract

          We present a novel method to transport ultra cold atoms in a focused optical lattice over macroscopic distances of many Rayleigh ranges. With this method ultra cold atoms were transported over 5 cm in 250 ms without significant atom loss or heating. By translating the interference pattern together with the beam geometry the trap parameters are maintained over the full transport range. Thus, the presented method is well suited for tightly focused optical lattices that have sufficient trap depth only close to the focus. Tight focusing is usually required for far-detuned optical traps or traps that require high laser intensity for other reasons. The transport time is short and thus compatible with the operation of an optical lattice clock in which atoms are probed in a well designed environment spatially separated from the preparation and detection region.

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          Laser-noise-induced heating in far-off resonance optical traps

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            Bloch oscillations of atoms, adiabatic rapid passage, and monokinetic atomic beams

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              Measurement of the Temperature Dependence of the Casimir-Polder Force

              We report on the first measurement of a temperature dependence of the Casimir-Polder force. This measurement was obtained by positioning a nearly pure 87-Rb Bose-Einstein condensate a few microns from a dielectric substrate and exciting its dipole oscillation. Changes in the collective oscillation frequency of the magnetically trapped atoms result from spatial variations in the surface-atom force. In our experiment, the dielectric substrate is heated up to 605 K, while the surrounding environment is kept near room temperature (310 K). The effect of the Casimir-Polder force is measured to be nearly 3 times larger for a 605 K substrate than for a room-temperature substrate, showing a clear temperature dependence in agreement with theory.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                16 April 2012
                Article
                10.1088/1367-2630/14/7/073020
                1204.3464
                8f54689f-88b6-41fc-9813-4f555ec56811

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

                History
                Custom metadata
                New J. Phys. 14 (2012) 073020
                14 pages, 6 figures
                physics.atom-ph physics.optics

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