Three-dimensional Doppler, polarization-gradient, and magneto-optical forces for atoms and molecules with dark states
J. A. Devlin, M. R. Tarbutt

TL;DR
This paper theoretically analyzes three-dimensional magneto-optical forces in systems with dark states, revealing unique behaviors in type-II systems that impact laser cooling and trapping of atoms and molecules.
Contribution
It uncovers the distinct 3D force behaviors in type-II systems with dark states, including a new magneto-optical force affecting MOT dynamics.
Findings
In 3D, type-II systems exhibit forces with opposite signs, leading to a non-zero equilibrium velocity.
The equilibrium velocity squared scales linearly with light intensity and is insensitive to detuning.
A new magneto-optical force significantly influences MOT behavior at low magnetic fields.
Abstract
We theoretically investigate the damping and trapping forces in a three-dimensional magneto-optical trap (MOT), by numerically solving the optical Bloch equations. We focus on the case where there are dark states because the atom is driven on a "type-II" system where the angular momentum of the excited state, , is less than or equal to that of the ground state, . For these systems we find that the force in a three-dimensional light field has very different behaviour to its one dimensional counterpart. This differs from the more commonly used "type-I" systems () where the 1D and 3D behaviours are similar. Unlike type-I systems where, for red-detuned light, both Doppler and sub-Doppler forces damp the atomic motion towards zero velocity, in type-II systems in 3D, the Doppler force and polarization gradient force have opposite signs. As a result, the atom is driven towards a…
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