Browsing by Author "Volchkov, Valentin V."
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Item Unknown Optical pumping of a dense quantum gas at its limits : continuous Sisyphus cooling and demagnetization cooling towards degeneracy(2013) Volchkov, Valentin V.; Pfau, Tilman (Prof. Dr.)In this thesis, I study optical pumping as a powerful cooling tool for trapped ultra-cold atoms in a highly collisional regime. First application of optical pumping is a continuous loading scheme used to transfer atoms from a guided beam into a hybrid trap. Further, I introduce a Sisyphus cooling scheme based on radio-frequency transitions and optical pumping, operating simultaneously to the accumulation of atoms in the trap. The combined scheme of continuous loading and Sisyphus cooling is demonstrated for a large range of initial conditions of the guided atoms. Thereby, I show that collisional thermalization occurs in a steady-state for almost arbitrary initial conditions, provided that the first dissipative step is able to prevent the atom from leaving the trap during its first passage. On the one hand, this scheme could be applied to a wide range of atomic or molecular beams. On the other hand, phase-space density of 4*10^-4 is reached in a continuous operation mode with chromium atoms. In the second part, I investigate demagnetization cooling based on dipolar relaxation collisions driving the thermalization of the internal (spin) and the external (motional) degrees of freedom. In the case of a gas, one has the advantage that the spin degree of freedom can be cooled very efficiently using optical pumping. It is shown, that demagnetization cooling of a gas is more efficient than evaporation cooling in terms of phase-space density gain versus loss of atoms. This allows reaching a temperature of 6uK at a phase-space density of 0.03. It is observed, that both, continuous Sisyphus cooling and demagnetization cooling are limited by a density dependent loss mechanism. I present circumstantial evidence for excited-state collisions as the dominant limiting process. Finally, I discuss possible extensions to the current experimental procedures, possibly allowing reaching quantum degeneracy by optical means only.