Publication | Closed Access
Bright, slow, and continuous beam of laser-cooled cesium atoms
39
Citations
10
References
1999
Year
Molasses TechniquePhotonicsLaser-cooled Cesium AtomsOptical PumpingEngineeringPhysicsThermal BloomingOptical PropertiesRelativistic Laser-matter InteractionApplied PhysicsAtomic PhysicsOptical TrappingOptoelectronicsOptical Molasses
By the moving molasses technique we have extracted laser-cooled cesium atoms in a continuous way directly from an optical molasses. The mean launching velocity is precisely tunable from 1 to 12 m/s. The atomic beam has a flux of $1.3\ifmmode\times\else\texttimes\fi{}{10}^{8} \mathrm{a}\mathrm{t}\mathrm{o}\mathrm{m}/\mathrm{s}$ at 7 m/s and a longitudinal temperature of $70 \ensuremath{\mu}\mathrm{K},$ which represents the highest flux and lowest velocity spread obtained so far in a continuous beam of cold atoms. These features makes it well suited for atomic fountains. The atomic flux can be slightly increased in a two-dimensional magneto-optical trap operation $(+40%).$ A simple model accounts for the observed dependence of the flux with the magnetic-field gradient.
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