Engineering Rydberg Wavepackets Using a Chirped Half-Cycle Pulse Train

POSTER

Abstract

A protocol for driving Rydberg atoms to a narrow band of targeted final n states with the aid of a chirped train of half-cycle pulses (HCPs) is described. A localized wavepacket can be generated and maintained by a periodic driving force. The dynamics of such a wavepacket can be manipulated almost as easily and as freely as the dynamics of a single classical particle. This is demonstrated experimentally by exciting potassium atoms to the lowest-lying quasi-one-dimensional (quasi 1-D) states in the n = 350 Stark manifold and transporting them to a narrow range ($\Delta $n$\sim \pm $20) of higher-n states centered on values of n of up to n $\sim $ 670. The protocol is remarkably efficient, with over 90{\%} of the parent atoms surviving the HCP sequence in strongly-polarized quasi-1D states.

*Research supported by the DOE, the NSF, the FWF (Austria), and the Robert A. Welch Foundation.

Authors

  • Jeffrey Mestayer

    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Rice University
  • Wei Zhao

    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Rice University
  • Jim Lancaster

    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Rice University
    • Rice University
  • F. Barry Dunning

    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Rice University
    • Rice University
  • Shuhei Yoshida

    • Vienna University of Technology
  • Carlos Reinhold

    • Oak Ridge National Laboratory
  • Joachim Burgdorfer

    • Vienna University of Technology