Creation, Control, and Detection of Rydberg Excitations in Ultracold Strontium

POSTER

Abstract

We benchmark a new apparatus for studying Rydberg physics in ultracold gases by demonstrating the ability to create, control, and detect high-lying excitations. Two-photon transitions via the narrow 5s5p $^{3}$P$_{j}$ intercombination line, unique to alkaline-earth-like atoms, are used to create triplet 5s\textit{nl} Rydberg states with enhanced lifetimes that are inaccessible in alkali systems. These Rydberg excitations have strong, long-range dipolar interactions that can be tuned with principal quantum number and Rydberg fraction. To monitor $n$ and the number of Rydberg atoms created we employ pulsed-field ionization and a microchannel plate detector. This work serves as an important milestone toward realizing many-body phenomena such as roton physics, 3D solitons, supersolidity and long-range spin models.

*Research supported by the AFOSR under grant no. FA9550-12-1-0267, the NSF under grants nos. 1301773 and 1205946, and the Robert A. Welch Foundation under grant no. C-0734.

Authors

  • Joseph Whalen

    • Rice University
    • Rice Univ
  • Roger Ding

    • Rice Univ
  • Francisco Camargo

    • Rice University
    • Rice Univ
  • Germano Woehl Junior

    • Rice Univ
  • F. Barry Dunning

    • Physics and Astronomy, Rice University
    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Rice University
    • Rice University
    • Rice Univ
  • Thomas Killian

    • Rice University
    • Rice Univ