1. IntroductionIn the ultracold Bose–Einstein condensate (BEC), the interatomic interaction modifies the system behaviors to deviate from the ideal gas,[1] which provides a platform to explore exotic quantum phenomena such as low-energy excitations,[2–4] phase transitions in optical lattices,[5–7] artificial gauge potential,[8,9] low-dimension physics,[10,11] and many others. Due to the small in-situ size of the condensate in the trap, the cold atomic sample is usually probed after certain free expansion time.[12] The interatomic interaction plays an important role to determine the expansion dynamics. After the condensate being released from the trap, the interaction energy is converted to the kinetic energy and the initial acceleration after switching off the trap is determined by the gradient of the interaction energy.[13–15] The expansion behaviors of the condensate are dependent on the shape of the external trap, namely, the initial condition of the system. Previously the condensate is mostly produced in an anistotropic trap (i.e.,
, where ϵ is the aspect ratio between the axial and radial frequencies) due to the technical challenge, which leads to an increased degree of complexity in the study of the free expansion. In this case, the expansion behaviors could not be analytically solved without approximation because solving different coupled second-order differential equations is required.[1,15–17] Obtaining the quantum system with an analytic solution allows a more lucid description of the condensate dynamics and an immediate comparison between experiment and theory. Condensate in an isotropic trap (i.e., ϵ=1) is a special case that the expansion behavior can be analytically solved. Here we only need to solve one differential equation due to the spherical symmetry. Nevertheless, the experimental study of this expansion is still lacking.
Previously, Hodby et al. were able to modify the aspect ratio (ϵ=2.83–1.6) in a magnetic trap while keeping the confinement tight.[18] However they did not report achieving a fully isotropic trap. Lobser and his colleagues realized an isotropic magnetic trap with the aid of the gravity force.[19] But the weak confinement (the trapping frequency
) in their work is disadvantageous to obtain a pure condensate.
In this paper, we produce a spherical rubidium condensate in an optical dipole trap with an asphericity of 0.037. The large trapping frequency (2π×77.5 Hz) is favorite to produce a pure condensate. Then we measure the condensate widths in the expansion process as well as the interaction energy of the condensate in the trap.We find that the condensate expansion is isotropic and the experimental results agree well with the analytic solution based on the spherical symmetry, which are different from our previous study[20] and other group’s works[1,21–23] on the non-spherical BEC. We explore the expansion dynamics in which the the interaction energy is gradually converted into the kinetic energy and after a long time the expansion velocity reaches a constant value.
The paper is organized as follows. We first present the production of a spherical rubidium condensate in Section 2. Then we introduce the expansion behaviors of the condensate in Section 3. Subsequently the interaction energy of the condensate in the trap is obtained in Section 4. Finally, the conclusions are summarized in Section 5.
2. Production of a spherical Bose condensateThe experimental setup is composed of double magneto-optical traps (MOTs), which is similar to that in our previous works.[20,24,25] 87Rb atoms are cooled and trapped in the first MOT and then transferred to the second MOT with a series of optical pushing pulses. In the second MOT, the atom number is
and the temperature is
. The atom temperature is further reduced to
after a sub-Doppler cooling process. Then the atoms are loaded into a magnetic trap, where the atom number is
and the temperature is
. Subsequently the atoms are cooled with the radio frequency (RF) induced evaporation cooling to
and then transferred into a hybrid trap composed of magnetic and optical dipole fields.[16] Finally we transfer the cold atoms into an optical dipole trap by gradually switching off the magnetic trap.
We produce a spherical 87Rb BEC in an optical dipole trap in which the trapping frequencies along x, y, z directions are the same. As shown in Fig. 1(a), the optical dipole trap is composed of two far red-detuned laser beams with the wavelength
. The Rayleigh length,
, is much longer than the beam waist w0. For a single laser beam, the trapping frequency in the radial direction is about 200 times larger than that in the axial direction. So the trapping effect along the propagation direction can be neglected. To produce a fully isotropic trap, the gravity force should be included.[18,19] The trapping potential, which is composed of the optical dipole trap and the gravity, is given by
where
(
) and
(
) are the waists of the optical beam propagating along the
y (
x) direction, and
U1 and
U2 are the peak potential energies of the two beams, respectively. By expanding Eq. (
1) in the potential minimum
to the second order, forming a spherical BEC should satisfy the conditions
where
. In the experiment, we can accurately adjust the intensities of the two beams to simultaneously match Eqs. (
2) and (
3).
Now we can discuss the solutions of Eqs. (2) and (3) for a spherical trap. (i) If the confinement in the vertical direction is stronger than that in the horizontal direction for the optical dipole trap (i.e.,
), it can be weakened by the gravity sag so that the trapping frequencies along x, y, z directions can be identical. In this condition, there exists a solution for Eqs. (2) and (3).(ii) If the confinement in the vertical direction is equivalent to or weaker than that in the horizontal direction (i.e.,
), the trapping frequency in the vertical direction is always smaller than that in the horizontal direction under the gravity sag. In this condition, there is no solution. (iii) If neglecting the gravity term in Eq. (1) (for example, the gravity is compensated by an appropriate gradient magnetic field), the condition of forming a spherical trap will change to the equation
. But it is a big technical challenge to accurately satisfy this equation by adjusting the relative shapes of the two laser beams. So in our experiment, we choose the condition
to form a spherical trap.
We measure the trapping frequency by probing the center-of-mass (COM) motion of the atomic cloud in the trap. After displacing atoms away from the equilibrium position for 2 ms, the COMs of the atomic cloud along x, y, and z directions are monitored, respectively. The experimental results are shown in Fig. 1(b). Using a sinusoidal wavefunction
(
and
) to fit the experimental data, we get the trapping frequencies
,
,and
. The frequency uncertainties are from the fitting process.The mean trapping frequency (
) is much larger than that in Ref. [19]. The asphericity
, where
and
are the maximum and minimum trapping frequencies along the three directions, respectively. The tight confinement here is favorite to produce a pure condensate with negligible thermal gases and obtain experimental data with a large signal-to-noise ratio. We improve the position stability of the optical trap beam to be better than
, keeping the condensate well in a spherical shape. The atoms stay in the spin state
. The atom number is
and the temperature is 80(5) nK. The BEC is well in the hydrodynamic limit withan adimensional parameter
,[27] where
is the s-wave scattering length,
is the harmonic oscillator length of the trap, and N is the atom number.
It should be noted that one limitation of the optical trap is the anharmonicity, which is specially serious for a big condensate. Fortunately, the atomic cloud in the trap is small (
) due to the large trapping frequency in our experiment, greatly softening the anharmonicity. The small anharmonicity does not affect the key features of the experimental results.
After suddenly switching off the optical trap, we measure the aspect ratio
of the condensate during the free expansion. The experimental results are shown in Fig. 2. The condensate width
during the expansion is obtained by fitting the optical density of the image with a Thomas–Fermi (TF) distribution. For the images probed in the horizontal direction,
, where
and
are the TF radii in the horizontal and vertical directions, respectively. For the images probed in the vertical direction,
, where
and
are the TF radii in the x and y directions, respectively.
remains unity during the free expansion, which is unique for a spherical BEC. For annon-spherical BEC, the expansion is anisotropic and the aspect ratio
approaches an asymptotic value dependent on the ratio of the trapping frequencies.[1,15,21–23]
3. Expansion behavior of the condensateInteratomic interaction plays an important role to determine the expansion dynamics of BEC. Figure 3(a) briefly indicates variations of different energy components in the expansion process.[1,13,16] The chemical potential
is composed of kinetic energy Ekin, potential energy Ep, and interaction energy Eint. In the trap, Ekin is negligibly small and
according to the Virial relation
. After BEC being released from the trap, Ep is switched off and Eint starts to be converted into Ekin gradually, which makes the release energy
keep constant during the expansion. After a long-time expansion, the interaction energy is completely converted to the kinetic energy. This provides a efficient way to measure the interaction energy of BEC in the trap by probing the long-time expansion velocity, which will be followed in Section 4.
During the expansion, the atomic cloud experiences just a free dilatation. Three scaling factors, i.e.,
, may be introduced as in Refs. [1,15,21], and [22] which describe the trajectory of any infinitesimally small fraction at the position
of the moving cloud.For an axially symmetric BEC (i.e.,
) mostly produced previously, it is required to solve two coupled second-order differential equations to get the evolution of the scaling factors,[1,15–17] where the analytic solution is generally absent. While for a spherical BEC with
, the two coupled differential equations simply merge into one
The solution can be obtained analytically as
where
,
is the Gamma function, and
is the hypergeometric function.
According to Eq. (5), we can easily obtain the asymptotic behavior of the scaling factor
for a short- or long-time expansion
| |
| |
The scaling factor of the condensate in the expansion process is shown in Fig. 3(b). For the short-time expansion (
),
and
. This means that after the trap being switched off, the expansion is speeding and the acceleration decreases versus the expansion time. These behaviors can be understood that the interaction energy is gradually converted into the kinetic energy and decreases during the expansion.[1,16,23] For the long-time expansion (
),
. In this region, the interaction energy has been completely converted to the kinetic energy and the expansion velocity finally reaches a constant value. The intermediate region with
indicates the crossover from the acceleration regime to the linear expansion. The quantitative calculations in Fig. 3(b) provide a lucid description of the expansion dynamics.Under the TF approximation, the complete conversion time of the interaction energy into kinetic energy is roughly determined by the trapping frequency (
) and has no dependence on the scattering length. The effect of the scattering length is included in the initial density distribution of the condensate.
In Fig. 4, we measure the scaling factor during the expansion. The size of the cloud is defined as
, where
(
) is the TF radius of the condensate, and
. Under the TF approximation, R(0) is calculated from the atom number and trapping frequency, and
is measured in the experiment. The experimental results with three atomic numbers are consistent with the theoretical prediction of Eq. (5). Due to the limited resolution of the imaging system (
),[25] we show the experimental data for expansion time larger than 7 ms (i.e.,
). In this region, the interaction energy of the condensate has been completely converted to the kinetic energy. So our current experimental results only demonstrate the long-time expansion behavior as predicted with Eq. (7). In order to observe the short-time expansion with
, an imaging system with a larger numerical aperture is required.
4. Interaction energy of the condensateDuring the expansion, the interaction energy is gradually converted into the kinetic energy Ekin. After atoms being releasing from the trap, Ekin can be written in the following integral:
where
is the density at position
, and
m is the atomic mass. By using
, equation (
8) becomes
It was shown in Ref. [
15] that the density
still satisfies the generalized TF distribution for a time-dependent problem, which takes the form
for a spherical atomic cloud, where
R(
t) is the generalized TF radius at the time
t,
has been normalized to unity, i.e.,
, and
is a spherical domain with radius
R(
t). Substituting Eq. (
10) into Eq. (
9), we easily obtain
As shown in Fig. 3, the interaction energy is completely converted to the kinetic energy after a long-time expansion. So the interaction energy Eint at
is roughly equivalent to the kinetic energy Ekin at
.
We can check the validity of Eq. (11). From Eq. (7), the size of the cloud R(t) at
should behave as
where
R(0) is the size at
t = 0. Then the interaction energy of the condensate in the trap becomes
where
is the chemical potential in the trap. Equation (
13) is consistent with the well-known result
.
[1]In the experiment, we extract the expansion velocity for the long-time expansion by linearly fitting the TF radii of the condensate. One example of this fitting process is shown in the inset of Fig. 5. The expansion time is long with
(i.e.,
), which ensures that the expansion velocity has approached the constant value (see Fig. 3(b)). Then the interaction energy of the condensate in the trap can be calculated with Eq. (11).
On the other hand, the chemical potential of the condensate in the trap can be calculated with[1,13–15]
The interaction energy of the condensate in the trap versus the atom number is ploted in Fig.
5. The experimental measurements are consistent with the theoretical prediction with Eq. (
14).
5. Conclusion and prospectIn conclusion, we experimentally observe the expansion behaviors of a spherical Bose condensate. A spherical rubidium condensate is produced in an optical dipole trap and the characteristic isotropic expansion is observed in the experiment. The condensate widths in the expansion process as well as the interaction energy of the condensate in the trap are measured. We find that the expansion in the short time is speeding and then after a long time the expansion velocity reaches a constant value. The intrinsic mechanics of this behavior is that the interaction energy is converted into the kinetic energy at the beginning of the expansion and the kinetic energy saturates after a long-time expansion. All the measurements agree well with the analytic solution based on the spherical symmetry.
The spherical condensate has unique features due to the spherical symmetry, which paves the way of our future research. First, we will study the exotic quantum state in the spin–orbital–angular-momentum (SOAM) coupled condensate in which the rotation symmetry is required.[24,28,29] Secondly, the excitation spectrum of the condensate is simplified by degeneracy.[1,27,30] The well-defined symmetry facilitates the studies of coupling between collective modes and their Landau damping rates.[31] Quantitative calculations of these processes currently have been carried out.[30,32–34] We will accurately measure the collective mode of the spherical condensate in the finite-temperature regime, extracting subtle many-body effects like thermal and quantum fluctuations.[35–38] In addition, compared to a magnetic trap, the spherical trap composed of the optical field is advantageous to study the non-equilibrium dynamics, where fast modulation of the confinement strength is generally applied.