2:00 PM–3:40 PM, Thursday, May 29, 2008
Keller Building - 104
Chair: Eric Wells, Augustana College, Sioux Falls
2:40 PM–3:00 PM
Aaron Dunn
(Rice University)
We present the design and characterization of a short extended cavity diode laser with immediate applications in ultracold atomic physics. To reach wavelengths unavailable in commercial laser diodes, a laser was constructed such that it could be cooled without loss in performance. We demonstrate that this laser design has a mode-hop-free tuning range of 20 GHz or greater when modulating laser current, and that it can also be adjusted using temperature controls and a piezo-electric output coupler mount. We also show that this laser achieves stable single-mode operaction with both 90\% and 50\% reflective output couplers without degrading its performance. Finally, we present an application of this laser as a repumper in cooling and trapping experiments of $^{88}$Sr, including increasing the yield of trapped atoms and studying the lifetimes of metastable atomic states.