† Corresponding author. E-mail:
Project supported by the Ministry of Science and Technology of China (Grant No. 2013YQ09094304).
The loss rate of cold atoms in a trap due to residual gas collisions differs from that in a free state after the cold atoms are released from the trap. In this paper, the loss rate in a cold rubidium-87 atom cloud was measured in a magneto-optical trap (MOT) and during its free flight. The residual gas pressure was analyzed by a residual gas analyzer, and the pressure distribution in a vacuum chamber was numerically calculated by the angular coefficient method. The decay factor, which describes the decay behavior of cold atoms due to residual gas collisions during a free flight, was calculated. It was found that the decay factor agrees well with theoretical predictions under various vacuum conditions.
Progress in laser cooling and trapping of neutral atoms has made it possible to produce samples with a large number of cold atoms.[1] Such samples will be useful for high-resolution spectroscopy, collision measurements, and frequency standards.[2] In a cold atom frequency standard, such as fountain atomic clocks, the number of the detected cold atoms is very important for obtaining high performance. In these systems, the quantum projection noise is inversely proportional to the square root of the number of the detected atoms Nat. A higher effective number of atoms is required to improve the stability of the clock.[3] On the other hand, cold atom clocks using the Ramsey method[4] require a longer time interval between two π/2 pulses in order to obtain more narrow linewidths. While the longer time interval may lead to greater loss due to residual gas collisions.
The magneto-optical trap (MOT) is widely used to produce cold atomic samples,[5–7] and the basic connection between the loss rate of a MOT and the background gas pressure has been understood.[8–10] In a relatively shallow trap, such as far off resonance traps and magnetic traps, the corresponding residual gas collision mechanism has also been studied.[11–13] However, few articles have been published on the loss of cold atoms due to collisions with residual gas during a free flight. The cold atom clock operated in a microgravity is proposed to obtain a longer interrogation time, which may narrow the Ramsey linewidth.[14,15] Similarly, the space matter-wave interferometer is designed by using a longer pulse separation time in microgravity environments with the goal of enhancing the sensitivity.[16] The loss of cold atoms due to residual gas collisions may dominate because of their longer free flight time. For cold atoms during free flight, collisions may result in very small scattering angles. This ejects the cold atoms from the cloud, and the theory describing the loss rate due to residual gas collisions needs to be verified for the cold atoms during free flight.
In this paper, a theory connecting the residual gas pressure and the decay of a cold atom cloud in a MOT and during free flight is presented. The residual gas is analyzed using a residual gas analyzer. The stationary molecular flow of a vacuum chamber is also calculated numerically by the angular coefficient method, using the molecular flow module of COMSOL. Experiments are compared with the corresponding theory, and it is found that the experimental results agree well with theoretical predictions. The results are significant, as they verify the reliability of the theory. According to the theory, we can estimate the required vacuum pressure and design the vacuum system accordingly.
The MOT loading and loss process can be described by the following rate equation:[17]
On the other hand, the loss rate γ can generally be expressed as
For MOTs, the interaction potential between the ground-state trapped atoms and residual gas species i can be adequately described using the van der Waals form −Ci/r6.[11,17,18] The well depth D of a MOT is on the order of 1 K, and the speed s imparted to the trapped atom can be calculated during the collision using the impulse approximation.[10] A trapped atom with mass m0 will be knocked out of the MOT if s > v0, where
For collisions between the excited state trapped atoms and residual gas (non-alkali-metal species), the loss rate coefficients can be expected to differ by no more than 30% from the ground-state estimates.[17] Moreover, the loss rate due to the collision between the trapped atoms and hot atoms of the same species can be measured by varying the density of the hot atoms.
For relatively shallow traps, such as far off resonance traps[19,20] and magnetic traps,[21] typical well depths range from less than 1 mK to 10 mK. When the scattering angles required to eject atoms from the trap are sufficiently small, a classical small-angle approximation is not valid.[22] The loss rate can be given by
Similarly, for cold atoms (the temperature of the cold atom cloud is on the order of 1–100 μK) during free flight, very small scattering angles may result in ejection of cold atoms from the cold atom cloud. There is no well depth for cold atoms during free flight, and the collision loss cross section is equal to the total collision cross section and the total collision cross section can be obtained by the optical theorem.[23] The corresponding loss rate is obtained by evaluating Eq. (
The loss rate should be averaged over the Maxwell–Boltzmann distribution of residual gas speed. The flying velocity of the cold atoms is much smaller than the most probable velocity of the residual gas and can be neglected. In this case, the loss rate can be expressed as
Experiments were based on the 87Rb space cold atom clock (SCAC) designed for operating in microgravity. The Ramsey cavity of the SCAC is a ring cavity with four end-end rectangular waveguide cavities, according to the U-type interrogation cavity.[27] The schematic diagram of the experimental setup is shown in Fig.
The double-pump system includes an ion pump (TiTanTM 3S ion pump) and getters (St 171/HI/16-10), and the system is used to keep the SCAC vacuum near 5 × 10−8 Pa.[28] The ion pump is connected to the vacuum tube by a flange, as shown in Fig.
A vacuum valve for UHV and XHV applications makes it possible to connect the ultra-high vacuum system and the external pump group when the space cold atom clock is assembled. The external pump group consists of an ion pump and a residual gas analyzer. As shown in Fig.
The 87Rb atoms are stored in an oxygen-free copper cell rather than a rubidium dispenser, which is designed to allow diffusion into the cooling zone. The cell is temperature controlled during the experiment. About 108 Rb atoms can be captured by a compact MOT,[29] which is built with two cooling lasers reflected by the mirrors in the cooling zone. The cooling lasers are red detuned by about 18 MHz to the |52S1/2, F = 2⟩ → |52P3/2, F′ = 3⟩ transition of the 87Rb D2 line. The repumping laser is operated at a frequency corresponding to the |52S1/2,F = 1⟩ → |52P1/2,F′ = 2⟩ transition. An imaging lens is aligned with the center of the MOT, and the MOT fluorescence is collected with a photodiode. MOT loading experiments were performed by switching AOMs and recording the photodiode current with a digital multi-meter (Agilent 34410A).
The atomic sample is launched by moving molasses, and as a result the cold atoms move towards the state selection cavity at a velocity depending on the frequency difference between the two lasers. In this experiment, cold atoms are launched vertically downward with 1 m/s velocity, and cold atoms have a free flight time of about 300 ms. At the beginning of the flight, the cold atoms are further cooled to about 2 μK in the moving molasses by post cooling.[30,31] The atoms are cooled by tuning the frequency of the cooling lasers from −2Γ to −12Γ while reducing the power of the cooling lasers asymptotically to zero.[32]
Cold atoms fly through the selection zone, the Ramsey interaction zone, and the detection zone in succession. Once the cold atoms enter the detection zone, F = 2 atoms are detected using a standing wave tuned near the |52S1/2,F = 2⟩ → |52P3/2,F′ = 3⟩ cycling transition. The TOF signal of the cold atom is sampled and recorded by the control electronics system.
To test the relationship between the vacuum pressure and the loss rate of cold atoms, we varied the background vacuum pressure. As shown in Fig.
Figure
The getter has no pump for rare gases, and the 3 L/s ion pump has a pump speed for these gases. Meanwhile, there is a distance between the ion pump and the RGA, and the effective pumping speed of the 3 L/s ion pump at the RGA position will be further reduced. When the vacuum valve connected the 40 L/s ion pumps is closed, a rare gas (such as argon, methane, and neon) peak appears at the corresponding position.
For hydrogen and other gases (such as nitrogen, carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, and water), there is a longer distance between the getter and the RGA, and the effective pumping speed of the getter at the RGA position will also be reduced. When the vacuum valve connected to the 40 L/s ion pumps is closed, the partial pressures of these gases at the RGA are increased. As shown in Table
![]() | Table 1.
Calculated loss coefficients for collisions between cold Rb atoms and the residual gases. The MOT well depth is 1 K and the residual gas temperature is 300 K. The Ci coefficients are expressed in atomic units and are taken from Ref. [17] or calculated using the Slater–Kirkwood formula. The loss coefficients γi/Pi in the MOT are calculated by Eq. ( |
The MOT loading curves are shown in Fig.
It can be seen from the above that the vacuum valve connecting the 40 L/s ion pump can effectively change the vacuum conditions of the experimental system. In the experiments, we created different vacuum conditions by varying the distance of the valve plate and the valve seat. Figure
Since the MOT captures Rb atoms directly from the background gas in the experiment, the MOT loss rate due to hot Rb atoms in the background should be taken into account. According to Haw’s work,[33] the loading rate of the MOT is directly proportional to the density of hot Rb atoms, and the loss rate of the MOT due to the hot Rb atoms is proportional to the density of hot Rb atoms according to Eq. (
![]() | Fig. 6. (color online) MOT loss rate versus its loading rate. Red points show the experimentally measured values, and the black line is the fitting line for the experimentally measured values. |
Under different vacuum conditions, the MOT loading curves and the TOF signals of the cold atoms were recorded. After simulating the vacuum system by COMSOL, we obtained the pressure distribution of different residual gases under different vacuum conditions (typical in Fig.
The residual difference is relatively small, mainly from the two-body losses between cold atoms in the MOT and the contribution from other residual gases, such as neon and water. According to the results of Gensemer,[34] the trap-loss collisional rate constant β is on the order of 10−11 cm3·s−1 for 87Rb when the total trap laser intensity is greater than 10 mW/cm2, and trap laser detuning Δ is −3 Γ or −4 Γ; the estimated density for our MOT is on the order of 109 cm−3 (about 108 atoms in about 0.064 cm3). So the two-body loss
As shown in Fig.
The expansion of cold atomic clouds is mainly affected by the temperature of the cold atoms and their TOF. According to the fitting results of the TOF signal in Fig.
The red points in Fig.
As shown in the mass spectrum of Fig.
We have experimentally and theoretically studied the loss rate of cold atoms due to collisions with residual gases in the MOT and during free flight. The mass spectrum is scanned by the residual gas analyzer under different vacuum environments, and the main residual gases are hydrogen, nitrogen, carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, argon, and methane. We used the molecular flow module in COMSOL to obtain the partial pressure distribution for these main residual gases in the vacuum system. The relationship between the loss rate of cold atoms and several main residual gases were calculated. For the MOT loss rate, the contribution from background hot rubidium should be taken into account, and the loss rate agrees well with the calculated MOT loss rate. The agreement between the calculated and the measured loss rate of MOT also indicates that the results of the partial pressure distribution are credible. The measured relative decay factor during free flight under different vacuum pressures agrees well with the calculated relative decay factor obtained from semi-classical elastic scattering and the pressure distribution. Hence, it has been verified that the semi-classical elastic scattering is valid for the collision between cold atoms and residual gas during free flight. According to the semi-classical elastic scattering, we can quantify the loss of cold atoms caused by the residual gas and do further analyses of other mechanisms that lead to the loss of cold atoms.
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