An optical dipole trap for Erbium with tunable geometry

by Simon Baier
Abstract:
In this thesis, we describe the realization of a novel optical dipole trap for erbium atoms. The trap is based on time-averaged potentials and is thus tunable in geometry. We investigate both theoretically and experimentally the dynamic polarizability of ground-state erbium atoms. The polarizability is a very important quantity for the understanding of the atomic properties of erbium and, prior to this thesis, its value was unknown. We measure a dynamic polarizability of Re(α)=(84±2±18) a.u. for erbium atoms in a 1064-nm laser field, which is 47% lower than the one we calculated based on the best knowledge of the erbium atomic spectrum. This discrepancy might points to a too rough knowledge of the atomic level structure or to novel unexpected effects arising in sub-merged shell atoms. Further investigations both in theory and experiments are highly needed. For our novel optical dipole trap setup we use a scanning system consisting of an acousto-optical modulator, electronics and a customized optical setup. The dipole trap beam is shifted perpendicular to its horizontal axis, creating time-averaged potentials when the scan over a range of positions is fast enough compared to the trap frequency. The aspect ratio of the dipole trap can be tuned from 1.5 to 15. With the new dipole trap system we can load up to 35% of MOT atoms to the dipole trap, which is related to mode-matching arguments. Further the density at each evaporation step can be optimized, leading to a large overall evaporation efficiency of 3.5. This improvements result in up to three times larger numbers in the pure BEC compared to our previous experiments. With the new tunable dipole trap we are confident that in future we can investigate geometry-dependent anisotropic quantum effects, unique to dipolar gases.
Reference:
An optical dipole trap for Erbium with tunable geometry,
Simon Baier,
Master’s Thesis, 2012.
Bibtex Entry:
@article{BaierMSc,
  title = {An optical dipole trap for Erbium with tunable geometry},
  author = {Baier, Simon},
  journal = {Master's Thesis},
  year = {2012},
  month = {Oct},
  abstract = {In this thesis, we describe the realization of a novel optical dipole trap for
              erbium atoms. The trap is based on time-averaged potentials and is thus tunable
              in geometry. We investigate both theoretically and experimentally the dynamic
              polarizability of ground-state erbium atoms. The polarizability is a very important
              quantity for the understanding of the atomic properties of erbium and, prior to
              this thesis, its value was unknown. We measure a dynamic polarizability of 
              Re(α)=(84±2±18) a.u. for erbium atoms in a 1064-nm laser field, which is 47% lower
              than the one we calculated based on the best knowledge of the erbium atomic spectrum.
              This discrepancy might points to a too rough knowledge of the atomic level structure
              or to novel unexpected effects arising in sub-merged shell atoms. Further investigations
              both in theory and experiments are highly needed. For our novel optical dipole trap
              setup we use a scanning system consisting of an acousto-optical modulator, electronics
              and a customized optical setup. The dipole trap beam is shifted perpendicular to its
              horizontal axis, creating time-averaged potentials when the scan over a range of positions
              is fast enough compared to the trap frequency. The aspect ratio of the dipole trap can be
              tuned from 1.5 to 15. With the new dipole trap system we can load up to 35% of MOT atoms
              to the dipole trap, which is related to mode-matching arguments. Further the density 
              at each evaporation step can be optimized, leading to a large overall evaporation
              efficiency of 3.5. This improvements result in up to three times larger numbers in
              the pure BEC compared to our previous experiments. With the new tunable dipole trap 
              we are confident that in future we can investigate geometry-dependent anisotropic 
              quantum effects, unique to dipolar gases.},
  url = {http://www.erbium.at/FF/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/master_simon_baier.pdf},
}