Near-ground-state cooling of atoms optically trapped 300nm away from a hot surface
Y. Meng, A. Dareau, P. Schneeweiss, A. Rauschenbeutel

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates near-ground-state cooling of individual neutral Cesium atoms trapped within 300nm of a hot optical nanofiber, enabling advanced quantum control near nanophotonic structures.
Contribution
It introduces a degenerate Raman cooling technique for atoms close to hot surfaces, achieving motional ground state preparation in a nanophotonic environment.
Findings
Atoms localized less than 300nm from hot fiber surface
Successful ground-state cooling via Raman techniques
Applicable to various nanophotonic trapping systems
Abstract
Laser-cooled atoms coupled to nanophotonic structures constitute a powerful research platform for the exploration of new regimes of light-matter interaction. While the initialization of the atomic internal degrees of freedom in these systems has been achieved, a full preparation of the atomic quantum state also requires controlling the center of mass motion of the atoms at the quantum level. Obtaining such control is not straightforward, due to the close vicinity of the atoms to the photonic system that is at ambient temperature. Here, we demonstrate cooling of individual neutral Cesium atoms, that are optically interfaced with light in an optical nanofiber, preparing them close to their three-dimensional motional ground state. The atoms are localized less than 300nm away from the hot fiber surface. Ground-state preparation is achieved by performing degenerate Raman cooling, and the…
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