Applications of the atom-optical kicked rotor
Abstract
This thesis reports on the experimental investigation of several applications of the atom-optical quantum kicked rotor (AOQKR) using a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) of 87Rb atoms. The AOQKR was achieved by exposing a BEC to short periodic pulses from a horizontal optical standing wave formed from the interference of two off-resonant laser beams. In the first set of experiments the fidelity or overlap between the kicked rotor states with a reference state was studied. The fidelity resonance widths in pulse period and in acceleration were found to scale as the inverse cube of the kick numbers, a sub-Fourier behavior with possible application in precision measurement experiments. The sensitivity of the fidelity to acceleration was experimentally and theoretically investigated and found to depend on the magnitude and direction of the applied acceleration. The asymmetry between positive and negative acceleration was found to be related to the temperature of the atomic sample. In the second set of experiments, the phenomenon of a quantum ratchet (which is manifested by a directed current of particles in the absence of a net bias force) both at resonance and away from resonance was studied. It was confirmed that the current direction can be controlled by changing experimental parameters which leave the underlying symmetries of the system unchanged. It was demonstrated that this behavior can be understood using a single variable containing many of the experimental parameters. These experiments confirmed that such a ratchet behavior can under certain circumstances be the same in both the true classical and quantum regimes. The final application of the AOQKR discussed in this thesis is the quantum accelerator mode. Both the formation and decay mechanism of these modes were studied.
Collections
- OSU Dissertations [11222]