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Microlenses Offer Atom Interferometers

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A team at Universität Hannover in Germany has produced interferometer structures for atoms by focusing the near-IR output of a Ti:sapphire laser through arrays of microlenses to generate patterns of optical dipole potentials. The work, which appeared in the Nov. 25 issue of Physical Review Letters, promises to enable the development of miniaturized sensors based on atom interferometry.

Arrays of cylindrical microlenses patterned in fused silica focused 360 mW of the red-detuned output of the laser into a series of waveguides, forming a 42° beamsplitter and structures for Mach-Zehnder and Michelson interferometers. A CCD camera monitored the passage of ultracold 85Rb atoms through the structures by fluorescence imaging.
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Published: February 2003
Glossary
ti:sapphire laser
A Ti:sapphire laser is a type of solid-state laser that utilizes a titanium-doped sapphire crystal as the gain medium. The name Ti:sapphire comes from the combination of titanium (Ti) as the dopant and sapphire (Al2O3) as the host material. Ti:sapphire laser suppliers → This type of laser is known for its tunability across a broad range of wavelengths in the visible and near-infrared spectrum, typically from around 680 nanometers (deep red) to 1100 nanometers (near-infrared)....
arrays of microlensesinterferometer structures for atomsnear-IR outputResearch & TechnologySensors & DetectorsTi:sapphire laser

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