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Experiments with Supersonic Beams as a Source of Cold Atoms

Experiments with Supersonic Beams as a Source of Cold Atoms

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(a)<br />

(b)<br />

time<br />

Figure 5.25: A 1D illustration <strong>of</strong> how a one-way call can be used to cool and compress<br />

ph<strong>as</strong>e space. In (a) the one-way wall is placed at the center <strong>of</strong> the trap. <strong>Atoms</strong> can<br />

p<strong>as</strong>s through the wall in one direction, but not the other, compressing the atoms<br />

and incre<strong>as</strong>ing the density <strong>with</strong>out doing work or heating the atoms. In (b) the wall<br />

is swept through the 1D trapping potential, starting from the edge <strong>of</strong> the trap. By<br />

sweeping the wall slowly, each atom encounters the wall near its cl<strong>as</strong>sical turning<br />

point, resulting in their having low kinetic energy when they p<strong>as</strong>s through the wall<br />

and are trapped by the wall and the original potential. By sweeping the wall though<br />

the entire sample, each atom h<strong>as</strong> its energy reduced and the entire trap is cooled.<br />

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