Data di Pubblicazione:
2006
Abstract:
Adiabatic demagnetization is an efficient technique for
cooling solid samples by several orders of magnitude in
a single cooling step. In gases, the required coupling
between dipolar moments and motion is typically too
weak, but in dipolar gases--of high-spin atoms or
heteronuclear molecules with strong electric dipole
moments, for example--the method should be applicable.
Here, we demonstrate demagnetization cooling of a gas
of ultracold 52Cr atoms. Demagnetization is driven by
inelastic dipolar collisions, which couple the motional
degrees of freedom to the spin degree. In this way,
kinetic energy is converted into magnetic work, with a
consequent temperature reduction of the gas. Optical
pumping is used to magnetize the system and drive
continuous demagnetization cooling. We can increase the
phase-space density of our sample by up to one order of
magnitude, with almost no atom loss, suggesting that the
method could be used to achieve quantumdegeneracy via
optical means.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
Fattori, Marco
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