Bulletin of the American Physical Society
56th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics
Monday–Friday, June 16–20, 2025; Portland, Oregon
Session C04: Laser Cooling and Trapping I
2:00 PM–4:00 PM,
Tuesday, June 17, 2025
Oregon Convention Center
Room: Portland Ballroom 255
Chair: Travis Nicholson, Duke University
Abstract: C04.00008 : Imaging and Cooling a single Cs atom trapped in an optical tweezer with a narrow 6S1/2 - 5D5/2 quadrupole transition*
3:24 PM–3:36 PM
Presenter:
Saumitra Sudhir Phatak
(Purdue University)
Authors:
Saumitra Sudhir Phatak
(Purdue University)
Karl N Blodgett
(Purdue University)
Raymond Chen
(Purdue University)
Jonathan David Hood
(Purdue University)
Cesium, being the industry standard for cold-atom and atomic-clock experiments, offers the 6S1/2 - 5D5/2 transition with a linewidth of approximately 120 kHz. This linewidth is comparable to the trapping frequencies of tightly confined alkali atoms, making it ideal for high-fidelity control. We employ a spatial light modulator (SLM) to generate beams with different orbital angular momentum (OAM) modes, including vortex and Gaussian profiles. By controlling the beam polarization, we demonstrate ± 2 (OAM + spin) selection rules across the entire MF manifold for the Fg = 4 → Fe = 6 transition, thereby transferring two units of angular momentum using a single photon. Also this transition primarily decays through the 6P3/2 state, emitting a photon at 852 nm (D2 line), which allows for background-free imaging by filtering out the excitation wavelength at 685 nm, potentially enhancing the imaging fidelity.
In this talk, I will present the experimental methods and results for achieving polarization-tuned, magic-wavelength trapping and cooling. I will also describe how we explore both attractive and repulsive Sisyphus cooling regimes under these conditions. Furthermore, simulations reveal that the gradient of the electric field governs the interaction with the atom, while the gradient of the field's gradient drives the cooling mechanism. This transition offers a promising approach for background-free imaging and single photon-sideband cooling in single-atom experiments, potentially paving the way for a more efficient approach to cooling down till motional ground state of the tweezer for QIS applications.
*NSF Career Award (Award Abstract # 2239961)
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