Simulations Of Laser Cooling In An Ultracold Neutral Plasma
ORAL
Abstract
Ultracold neutral plasmas (UNPs) generated by photoionization of laser-cooled, magneto-optically trapped neutral gases, are useful systems for studying strongly coupled plasmas. Coupling is parameterized by $\Gamma_{i}$, the ratio of the average nearest neighbor Coulomb interaction energy to the ion kinetic energy. For typical UNPs, $\Gamma_{i}$ is currently limited to $\sim3$. For alkaline earth ions, higher $\Gamma_{i}$ can be achieved by laser-cooling. Using Molecular Dynamics and a quantum trajectories approach, we have simulated laser-cooling of Sr$^{+}$ ions interacting through a Yukawa potential. The simulations include re-pumping from two long-lived D-states, and are conducted at experimentally achievable parameters (density $n=2$\,e+14\,m$^{-3}$, size $\sigma_{0}=4$\,mm, $T_{e}$=19\,K). Laser-cooling is shown to both reduce the temperature by a factor of 2 over relevant timescales (tens of $\mu$\,s) and slow the electron thermal-pressure driven radial expansion of the UNP. We also discuss the unique aspects of laser-cooling in a highly collisional system; in particular, the effect of collisions on dark state formation due to the coupling of the P$_{3/2}$ state to both the S$_{1/2}$ (via the cooling transition) and the D$_{5/2}$ (via a re-pump transition) states.
*Supported by NSF and DoE, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, the NDSEG Program, and NIH NCRR S10RR02950, an IBM SUR Award in partnership with CISCO, Qlogic and Adaptive Computing
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