Temperature measurement of cold atoms using transient absorption of a resonant probe through an optical nanofibre

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Abstract

Optical nanofibres are ultrathin optical fibres with a waist diameter typically less than the wavelength of light being guided through them. Cold atoms can couple to the evanescent field of the nanofibre-guided modes and such systems are emerging as promising technologies for the development of atom-photon hybrid quantum devices. Atoms within the evanescent field region of an optical nanofibre can be probed by sending near or on-resonant light through the fibre; however, the probe light can detrimentally affect the properties of the atoms. In this paper, we report on the modification of the local temperature of laser-cooled 87Rb atoms in a magneto-optical trap centred around an optical nanofibre when near-resonant probe light propagates through it. A transient absorption technique has been used to measure the temperature of the affected atoms and temperature variations from 160 μk to 850 μk, for a probe power ranging from 0 to 50 nW, have been observed. This effect could have implications in relation to using optical nanofibres for probing and manipulating cold or ultracold atoms.

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Kumar, R., Gokhroo, V., Tiwari, V. B., & Chormaic, S. N. (2016). Temperature measurement of cold atoms using transient absorption of a resonant probe through an optical nanofibre. Journal of Optics (United Kingdom), 18(11). https://doi.org/10.1088/2040-8978/18/11/115401

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