Raman Cooling
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In
atomic physics Atomic physics is the field of physics that studies atoms as an isolated system of electrons and an atomic nucleus. Atomic physics typically refers to the study of atomic structure and the interaction between atoms. It is primarily concerned wit ...
, Raman cooling is a sub-recoil cooling technique that allows the cooling of
atoms Every atom is composed of a nucleus and one or more electrons bound to the nucleus. The nucleus is made of one or more protons and a number of neutrons. Only the most common variety of hydrogen has no neutrons. Every solid, liquid, gas, an ...
using optical methods below the limitations of
Doppler cooling Doppler cooling is a mechanism that can be used to trap and slow the motion of atoms to cool a substance. The term is sometimes used synonymously with laser cooling, though laser cooling includes other techniques. History Doppler cooling was si ...
, Doppler cooling being limited by the recoil energy of a photon given to an atom. This scheme can be performed in simple
optical molasses Optical molasses is a laser cooling technique that can cool neutral atoms to temperatures lower than a magneto-optical trap (MOT). An optical molasses consists of 3 pairs of counter-propagating circularly polarized laser beams intersecting in the ...
or in molasses where an
optical lattice An optical lattice is formed by the interference of counter-propagating laser beams, creating a spatially periodic polarization pattern. The resulting periodic potential may trap neutral atoms via the Stark shift. Atoms are cooled and congrega ...
has been superimposed, which are called respectively free space Raman cooling and Raman sideband cooling. Both techniques make use of
Raman scattering Raman scattering or the Raman effect () is the inelastic scattering of photons by matter, meaning that there is both an exchange of energy and a change in the light's direction. Typically this effect involves vibrational energy being gained by a ...
of laser light by the atoms.


Two photon Raman process

The transition between two hyperfine states of the atom can be triggered by two
laser A laser is a device that emits light through a process of optical amplification based on the stimulated emission of electromagnetic radiation. The word "laser" is an acronym for "light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation". The fir ...
beams: the first beam excites the atom to a virtual excited state (for example because its frequency is lower than the real transition frequency), and the second beam de-excites the atom to the other hyperfine level. The frequency difference of the two beams is exactly equal to the transition frequency between the two hyperfine levels. Raman transitions are good for cooling due to the extremely narrow line width of Raman transitions between levels that have long lifetimes, and to exploit the narrow line width the difference in frequency between the two laser beams must be controlled very precisely. The illustration of this process is shown in the example schematic illustration of a two-photon Raman process. It enables the transition between the two levels , g_1\rangle and , g_2\rangle. The intermediate, virtual level is represented by the dashed line, and is red-detuned with respect to the real excited level, , e\rangle. The frequency difference f_2-f_1 here matches exactly the energy difference between , g_1\rangle and , g_2\rangle.


Free space Raman cooling

In this scheme, a pre-cooled cloud of atoms (whose temperature is of a few tens of microkelvins) undergoes a series of pulses of Raman-like processes. The beams are counter-propagating, and their frequencies are just as what has been described above, except that the frequency f_2 is now slightly red-detuned (detuning \Delta) with respect to its normal value. Thus, atoms moving towards the source of the laser 2 with a sufficient velocity will be resonant with the Raman pulses, thanks to the
Doppler effect The Doppler effect or Doppler shift (or simply Doppler, when in context) is the change in frequency of a wave in relation to an observer who is moving relative to the wave source. It is named after the Austrian physicist Christian Doppler, who d ...
. They will be excited to the , g_2\rangle state, and get a momentum kick decreasing the modulus of their velocity. If the propagation directions of the two lasers are interchanged, then the atoms moving in the opposite direction will be excited and get the momentum kick that will decrease the modulus of their velocities. By regularly exchanging the lasers propagating directions and varying the detuning \Delta, one can manage to have all atoms for which the initial velocity satisfies , v, >v_ in the state , g_2\rangle, while the atoms such that , v, are still in the , g_1\rangle state. A new beam is then switched on, whose frequency is exactly the transition frequency between , g_2\rangle and , e\rangle. This will optically pump the atoms from the , g_2\rangle state to the , g_1\rangle state, and the velocities will be randomized by this process, such that a fraction of the atoms in , g_2\rangle will acquire a velocity , v, . By repeating this process several times (eight in the original paper, see references), the temperature of the cloud can be lowered to less than a microkelvin.


Raman sideband cooling

Raman sideband cooling is a method to prepare atoms in the vibrational ground state of a periodic potential and cool them below recoil limit. It can be implemented inside an optical dipole trap where cooling with less loss of trapped atoms could be achieved in comparison to evaporative cooling, can be implemented as a mid-stage cooling to improve the efficiency and speed of evaporative cooling, and is generally extremely insensitive to the traditional limitations of laser cooling to low temperatures at high densities. It has been successfully applied to cooling ions, as well as atoms like cesium, potassium, and lithium, etc.


General Raman sideband cooling scheme

The main method of Raman sideband cooling utilizes the two photon Raman process to connect m,n levels that differ by one harmonic oscillator energy. Since the atoms are not in their ground state, they will be trapped in one of the excited levels of the harmonic oscillator. The aim of Raman sideband cooling is to put the atoms into the ground state of the harmonic potential in itsl site. For a general example of a scheme, Raman beams (red in the included diagram) are two different photons (\gamma_1 and \gamma_2) that are linearly polarized differently such that we have a change in angular momentum, shifting from m_F = +1 to m_F = +2, but lowering from n to n-1 vibrational levels. Then, we utilize repumping with a single beam (blue in the included diagram) that does not change vibrational levels (i.e. keeping us in n-1, thus lowering the state of the harmonic potential in the site.


Degenerate Raman sideband cooling in an optical lattice

This more specific cooling scheme starts from atoms in a
magneto-optical trap A magneto-optical trap (MOT) is an apparatus which uses laser cooling and a spatially-varying magnetic field to create a trap which can produce samples of cold, trapped, neutral atoms. Temperatures achieved in a MOT can be as low as several microk ...
, using Raman transitions inside an optical lattice to bring the atoms to their vibrational ground states. An
optical lattice An optical lattice is formed by the interference of counter-propagating laser beams, creating a spatially periodic polarization pattern. The resulting periodic potential may trap neutral atoms via the Stark shift. Atoms are cooled and congrega ...
is a spatially periodic potential formed by the interference of counter-propagating beams. An
optical lattice An optical lattice is formed by the interference of counter-propagating laser beams, creating a spatially periodic polarization pattern. The resulting periodic potential may trap neutral atoms via the Stark shift. Atoms are cooled and congrega ...
is ramped up, such that an important fraction of the atoms are then trapped. If the lasers of the lattice are powerful enough, each site can be modeled as a harmonic trap. The optical lattice should provide a tight binding for the atoms, to prevent them from interacting with the scattered resonant photons and suppress the heating from them.Moqanaki, Amirhosein Mohammadi (2010-11). "Towards 3D Raman Sideband Cooling of Rubidium". Master's thesis, RHEINISCHE FRIEDRICH-WILHELMS-UNIVERSITAT BONN. This can be quantified in terms of Lamb-Dicke parameter \eta , which gives the ratio of the ground state wave-packet size to the wavelength of the interacting laser light. In an optical lattice, \eta can be interpreted as the ratio of photon recoil energy to the energy separation in the vibrational modes: \eta=\sqrt < 1 where E_r is recoil energy and E_v is vibrational energy. \eta < 1 is the Lamb-Dicke limit. In this regime, vibrational energy is larger than the recoil energy, and scattered photons cannot change the vibrational state of the atom. For specifically degenerate Raman sideband cooling, we can consider a two level atom, the ground state of which has a quantum number of F = 1, such that it is three-fold degenerate with m = -1, 0 or 1. A magnetic field is added, which lifts the degeneracy in m due to the
Zeeman effect The Zeeman effect (; ) is the effect of splitting of a spectral line into several components in the presence of a static magnetic field. It is named after the Dutch physicist Pieter Zeeman, who discovered it in 1896 and received a Nobel prize ...
. Its value is exactly tuned such that the Zeeman splitting between m = -1 and m = 0 and between m = 0 and m = 1 is equal to the spacing of two levels in the harmonic potential created by the lattice. By means of Raman processes, an atom can be transferred to a state where the magnetic moment has decreased by one and the vibrational state has also decreased by one (red arrows on the above image). After that, the atoms which are in the lowest vibrational state of the lattice potential (but with m\neq 1) are optically pumped to the m = 1 state (role of the \sigma_+ and \pi light beams). Since the temperature of the atoms is low enough with respect to the pumping beam frequencies, the atom is very likely not to change its vibrational state during the pumping process. Thus it ends up in a lower vibrational state, which is how it is cooled. In order to reach this efficient transfer to the lower vibrational state at each step, the parameters of the laser, i.e. power and timing, should be carefully tuned. In general, these parameters are different for different vibrational states because the strength of the coupling (
Rabi frequency The Rabi frequency is the frequency at which the probability amplitudes of two atomic energy levels fluctuate in an oscillating electromagnetic field. It is proportional to the Transition Dipole Moment of the two levels and to the amplitude (''not ...
) depends on the vibrational level. Additional complication to this naive picture arises from the recoil of photons, which drive this transition. The last complication can be generally avoided by performing cooling in the previously mentioned Lamb-Dicke regime, where the atom is trapped so strongly in the optical lattice that it effectively does not change its momentum due to the photon recoils. The situation is similar to the
Mössbauer effect The Mössbauer effect, or recoilless nuclear resonance fluorescence, is a physical phenomenon discovered by Rudolf Mössbauer in 1958. It involves the resonant and recoil-free emission and absorption of gamma radiation by atomic nuclei bound in ...
. This cooling scheme allows one to obtain a rather high density of atoms at a low temperature using only optical techniques. For instance, the Bose–Einstein condensation of
cesium Caesium (IUPAC spelling) (or cesium in American English) is a chemical element with the symbol Cs and atomic number 55. It is a soft, silvery-golden alkali metal with a melting point of , which makes it one of only five elemental metals that ar ...
was achieved for the first time in an experiment that used Raman sideband cooling as its first step. Recent experiments have shown it is even sufficient to attain
Bose–Einstein condensation Bose–Einstein may refer to: * Bose–Einstein condensate ** Bose–Einstein condensation (network theory) * Bose–Einstein correlations * Bose–Einstein statistics In quantum statistics, Bose–Einstein statistics (B–E statistics) describe ...
directly.


See also

*
Laser cooling Laser cooling includes a number of techniques in which atoms, molecules, and small mechanical systems are cooled, often approaching temperatures near absolute zero. Laser cooling techniques rely on the fact that when an object (usually an atom) ...
* Sub-Doppler cooling


References

{{Raman spectroscopy, state=expanded Atomic physics Cooling technology