Loading and spatially-resolved characterization of a cold atomic ensemble inside a hollow-core fiber
Thorsten Peters, Leonid P. Yatsenko, and Thomas Halfmann

TL;DR
This paper experimentally investigates the loading and spatial characterization of cold atoms inside a hollow-core fiber, revealing limits to efficiency and providing detailed spatial and thermal profiles crucial for quantum technology applications.
Contribution
It introduces a method for spatially-resolved analysis of atom loading in a hollow-core fiber and reports new data on loading efficiency, density, and temperature evolution.
Findings
Loaded up to 2.1 x 10^5 atoms with 2.1% efficiency
Achieved a peak atomic density of 10^12 cm^-3
Determined ensemble temperature and loss rates along the fiber
Abstract
We present a thorough experimental investigation of the loading process of laser-cooled atoms from a magneto-optical trap into an optical dipole trap located inside a hollow-core photonic bandgap fiber, followed by propagation of the atoms therein. This, e.g., serves to identify limits to the loading efficiency and thus optical depth which is a key parameter for applications in quantum information technology. Although only limited access in 1D is available to probe atoms inside such a fiber, we demonstrate that a detailed spatially-resolved characterization of the loading and trapping process along the fiber axis is possible by appropriate modification of probing techniques combined with theoretical analysis. Specifically, we demonstrate the loading of up to atoms with a transfer efficiency of 2.1 % during the course of 50 ms and a peak loading rate of $4.7 \times…
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