Gray-Molasses Optical-Tweezer Loading: Controlling Collisions for Scaling Atom-Array Assembly
Abstract
To isolate individual neutral atoms in microtraps, experimenters have long harnessed molecular photoassociation to make atom distributions sub-Poissonian. While a variety of approaches have used a combination of attractive (red-detuned) and repulsive (blue-detuned) molecular states, to date all experiments have been predicated on red-detuned cooling. In our work, we present a shifted perspective—namely, the efficient way to capture single atoms is to eliminate red-detuned light in the loading stage and use blue-detuned light that both cools the atoms and precisely controls trap loss through the amount of energy released during atom-atom collisions in the photoassociation process. Subsequent application of red-detuned light then assures the preparation of maximally one atom in the trap. Using Λ -enhanced gray-molasses for loading, we study and model the molecular processes and find we can trap single atoms with 90% probability even in a very shallow optical tweezer. Using 100 traps loaded with 80% probability, we demonstrate one example of the power of enhanced loading by assembling a grid of 36 atoms using only a single move of rows and columns in 2D. Our insight is key in scaling the number of particles in a bottom-up quantum simulation and computation with atoms, or even molecules.
- Publication:
-
Physical Review X
- Pub Date:
- January 2019
- DOI:
- 10.1103/PhysRevX.9.011057
- arXiv:
- arXiv:1811.01448
- Bibcode:
- 2019PhRvX...9a1057B
- Keywords:
-
- Physics - Atomic Physics;
- Quantum Physics
- E-Print:
- 6 pages, 3 figures