Atom trapping and guiding with a subwavelength-diameter optical fiber
Abstract
We suggest using an evanescent wave around a thin fiber to trap atoms. We show that the gradient force of a red-detuned evanescent-wave field in the fundamental mode of a silica fiber can balance the centrifugal force when the fiber diameter is about two times smaller than the wavelength of the light and the component of the angular momentum of the atoms along the fiber axis is in an appropriate range. As an example, the system should be realizable for cesium atoms at a temperature of less than 0.29mK using a silica fiber with a radius of 0.2μm and a 1.3-μm -wavelength light with a power of about 27mW .
- Publication:
-
Physical Review A
- Pub Date:
- July 2004
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:physics/0404110
- Bibcode:
- 2004PhRvA..70a1401B
- Keywords:
-
- 32.80.Pj;
- 32.80.Lg;
- 03.65.Ge;
- Optical cooling of atoms;
- trapping;
- Mechanical effects of light on atoms molecules and ions;
- Solutions of wave equations: bound states;
- Optics;
- Atomic Physics
- E-Print:
- 5 pages, 5 figures