Author:
deCarvalho R,Brahms N,Newman B,Doyle J M,Kleppner D,Greytak T
Abstract
Ultracold hydrogen offers unique possibilities for precision spectroscopy, studies of atomic interactions, and the creation of quantum fluids containing mixtures of hydrogen and deuterium. Current techniques for trapping and cooling hydrogen have produced large condensates with N ∼ 109 atoms, but suffer from a variety of experimental limitations. Among these are the slow evaporative cooling rate due to the small HH elastic-scattering cross section, the need for a superfluid helium film in the initial thermalization process, a geometry that severely limits detection efficiency, and the inability to trap deuterium. We are constructing a new apparatus based on buffer-gas cooling that will overcome these problems. To accelerate evaporative cooling, the thermalization rate is increased by simultaneously loading lithium and hydrogen into a 4.2 T anti-Helmholtz trap. Lithium accelerates evaporative cooling because the LiH elastic-scattering cross section is ∼1200 times larger than that of HH. Hydrogen and lithium will be produced by laser ablation of solid LiH in a 3He buffer gas held at temperatures of ∼350 mK. Because no wall collisions are needed for initial thermalization, ablating a solid sample of LiD should enable studies of deuterium. The apparatus is in the final stages of construction. We report on results of initial tests and discuss the new scientific opportunities made possible by this approach.PACS No.: 32.80.Pj
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
General Physics and Astronomy
Cited by
11 articles.
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