A passively pumped vacuum package sustaining cold atoms for more than 200 days

4 Jan 2021  ·  Bethany J. Little, Gregory W. Hoth, Justin Christensen, Chuck Walker, Dennis J. De Smet, Grant W. Biedermann, Jongmin Lee, Peter D. D. Schwindt ·

Compact cold-atom sensors depend on vacuum technology. One of the major limitations to miniaturizing these sensors are the active pumps -- typically ion pumps -- required to sustain the low pressure needed for laser cooling. Although passively pumped chambers have been proposed as a solution to this problem, technical challenges have prevented successful operation at the levels needed for cold-atom experiments. We present the first demonstration of a vacuum package successfully independent of ion pumps for more than a week; our vacuum package is capable of sustaining a cloud of cold atoms in a magneto-optical trap (MOT) for greater than 200 days using only non-evaporable getters and a rubidium dispenser. Measurements of the MOT lifetime indicate the package maintains a pressure of better than $2\times10^{-7}$ Torr. This result will significantly impact the development of compact atomic sensors, including those sensitive to magnetic fields, where the absence of an ion pump will be advantageous.

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Atomic Physics Applied Physics