학술논문

Design and simulation of a source of cold cadmium for atom interferometry
Document Type
Working Paper
Source
Subject
Physics - Atomic Physics
Language
Abstract
We present a novel optimised design for a source of cold atomic cadmium, compatible with continuous operation and potentially quantum degenerate gas production. The design is based on spatially segmenting the first and second-stages of cooling with the the strong dipole-allowed $^1$S$_0$-$^1$P$_1$ transition at 229 nm and the 326 nm $^1$S$_0$-$^3$P$_1$ intercombination transition, respectively. Cooling at 229 nm operates on an effusive atomic beam and takes the form of a compact Zeeman slower ($\sim$5 cm) and two-dimensional magneto-optical trap (MOT), both based on permanent magnets. This design allows for reduced interaction time with the photoionising 229 nm photons and produces a slow beam of atoms that can be directly loaded into a three-dimensional MOT using the intercombination transition. The efficiency of the above process is estimated across a broad range of experimentally feasible parameters via use of a Monte Carlo simulation, with loading rates up to 10$^8$ atoms/s into the 326 nm MOT possible with the oven at only 100 $^\circ$C. The prospects for further cooling in a far-off-resonance optical-dipole trap and atomic launching in a moving optical lattice are also analysed, especially with reference to the deployment in a proposed dual-species cadmium-strontium atom interferometer.
Comment: 16 pages, 12 figures, 3 tables